
Book I tA gcL . 



PRESENTHD HY 



f^u.. .. t' ' v*-^ ' C^^^*-' f ^ ^^ "i^ 



THE 



QUIN-DECENNIAL RECORD 



OF THE 



CLASS OF '93 



OF 



Princeton University 



EDITED BY 



THE QUIN-DECENNIAL COMMITTEE 



JUNE, 1908 




Gift 
Author 

29 



U\^ 






PREFACE 



" Not what we sing or what we say- 
Can make us dearer to each other; 
We love the singer and his lay, 

But love as well the silent brother." 

Owing to the fact that the last six months have been for most of us hard 
ones financially, the Committee in charge of the Quin-Decennial Reunion 
has not felt justified in making a lavish expenditure on the "Record," and 
have, therefore, limited it to a directory of living members with a few vital 
statistics and a short biographical sketch with photograph of each deceased 
member. 

Modest as the record is, it has the unique distinction of being the first 
ever issued by a Class graduated from Princeton, or any other university, 
so far as we can ascertain, in which every mem^ber and ex-member is ac- 
counted for, even though an ex-member was not with us for a longer 
period than a few days. 

The Committee is indebted to ^Ir. Duffield, the Treasurer of the Uni- 
versity, for assistance in tracing the addresses of some of the ex-members, 
to the relatives of the deceased who have kindly supplied biographical 
notes, and to " Tark " for the introduction. 

Gardiner H. ]\Iiller^ Chairman, 

James H. Britton^ 

Harold G. ^Murray, 

Alexander C. Proudfit, 

James S. Rogers, 

George C. Fraser. Secretary. 



INTRODUCTION 



This book is to be a compilation of statistics : cold, concise and business- 
like. There is to be no nonsense about it. That is what Big Murray says ; 
he warns us not to be frivolous, and the Committee indicate that horse- 
play is undesired. We are too old (the official persons declare), and if we 
don't know it, these records will serve to instruct us upon the point — re- 
minding us how unbecoming is the attempted mirth of senility. 

The introduction will, therefore, conform with the Committee's some- 
thing-more-than-hint, although I had hoped to be permitted some ease of 
the fireside familiar in this writing. I dare not risk it, nor (under cold 
instruction) dare their suspecting any of us still to possess the smallest 
measure of youth and un-dignity. 

Saith the Committee : 

" I am old. " We are old. 

" Thou art old. " You are old. 

" He, she and it is old. " They are old. 

" Everybod}'- is old. 

" So, for heaven's sake try to seem respectable ! " 

Those of us who have attained to years of penetration will derive one 
consolation from the official attitude : it seems to indicate that we aren't 
even yet so old that our mere unqualified age is in itself a sufficient proof 
of respectability. Can it be true that we are still young enough for those 
stern spirits of the Committee to suspect us of coltishnessf 

Had I not been warned I should have liked to dawdle a little with jocose 
"personalities," to sentimentalize a little, and to gossip more. I should 
have liked to sketch some meetings I have had with various semi-ruinous 
relics of '93, in the course of recent mild wanderings at home and abroad : 
I should have liked to muse upon these poor old things (once so proud 
in the vicious beauty of their youth) telling you of their transformations, 
of their present well-deserved decrepitude — and of their queer and pleasant 
resemblances to the boys we used to know. 

For instance, I should have liked to write of Billy Guild, and how you 
really wouldn't see much change in serious, smiling Billy. You, whose hair 
has waned and set might envy him. The fact is, you wouldn't think Billy 
a day older than when you put him through the car-window. (I allude 



to a custom prevalent at an institution once officially known as " The Col- 
lege of New Jersey." It is said that upon final departure into the wide, 
wide world the student is not allowed to enter the train in the usual man- 
ner.) Billy and I sat by a log fire one day, last November down in Ten- 
nessee, and he told me what quiet, peaceable folk all Tennesseans are. 
He stuck to it, even when our talk, a little later, brought out the fact that 
he had had the misfortune the preceding week to lose a client in a little 
difficulty which also caused the demise of two other citizens of the county. 
That was mighty like our old Billy ! 

This is the way I should have liked to "just run on" — writing, perhaps, 
of a drive with another Billy — Bill Barkley, along a shell road on the Gulf 
Coast, one Sunday afternoon last winter, and of the rubicund children Bill 
pointed out as his : even his youngest-looking fit for the rush-line already. 
And perhaps I should have told you of the fat man, rosy and merry, with 
a white waistcoat full of laughter, a fat man freshly gloved, boutoniered, 
and a thing of fashion always — ^the said fat man strolling down the Via 
Veneto in Rome : there encountered by your present scribe. To show you 
how profoundly Jesse Carter has altered, I will tell you that if you shouldn't 
have my luck — when he is in Rome — and should fail to meet him on the 
street, you may be sure of finding him at the Cosmopolis Club {a pretty 
gay little club, comrades!) at five every afternoon! And that is mighty 
unlike our Jesse ! 

And of Eddie Palmer. Eh ! messieurs ! there is a change ! One 
glimpse of that grave and bespectacled presence in its grim offices in Louis- 
ville would give you the profundity of transformation's possibilities. Doc- 
tor and Professor, holding the Chair his father held before him, a lecturer 
with the mien of a Doge, calm, inquisitorial, of Olympian aloofness and 
serenity, I found him; nought betraying him ive knew. Could but those 
students who sit awed, tremulously noting each word that falls from his 
lips, behold a vision of the past, the Eddie Palmer of a Glee-Club trip. 
. . . That thought would come : however, the Committee will probably 
blue-pencil it out, and even if they shouldn't no copy of this book is likely 
to fall into the hands of Doctor Palmer's pupils. 

And of a pair of elderly gentlemen in Boston, named Remsen and 
Brown, and how they gave a lunch that began at noon and ended with the 
aged Brown's walking to Brookline after the last car had gone. And of 
a chance meeting with Mr. Irving Brokaw in Paris, how he exhibited his 
thirty-five Mercedes to my envious eye, and explained (in that same " Why- 
deedn't you " voice) its virtues and his own as chauffeur and went his way, 
a-honking. And how Kep Hall and Harrison Daniels, Esq., get along 
with each other and Dayton ; and how Dan once went with me to see a 
play of mine that was failing, and in his loyalty to a classmate, offered 
such a conspicuous demonstration of approval that the sentiment of the 
audience was obviously divided ; it couldn't tell which it disliked more : 
Dan or the play. 

But all manner of the like mere gossip being denied me, as tinged with, 
edging upon, and pertaining unto a levity of mind unwholesome and un- 

8 



natural at this advanced period of life, I must get down to the solid busi- 
ness of introducing this book to you. And, after all, the Committee is right 
thus far : fifteen years out of college is no joke ! 

How old are we, really f Our unmarried certainly are "old-bachelors," 
and the undergraduate would not deny the term " old grad " to the 
youngest of us. And yet if one of us were President of the United States, 
he'd be called very young indeed. We are even young to be United States 
Senators : too young, I believe these statistics will prove, unless Park 
Davis has accrued to the Senate Chamber this spring. Let us, then, think 
of ourselves as in the " younger middle-age," the fighting time of life, the 
age when men are in the thick of it, with the smoke not yet enough 
cleared away to see how their lines stand the fire. It is now that we are 
making our records — and they will be permanent. In a very little while 
we won't be able to alter them, and can only look back upon them with 
sorrow or content for the things we do now in these years that whiz by 
so much faster than years ought to. 

From one point of view a man's age is defined by the direction of his 
interests, and when they center entirely in his college we know how old 
he is ; for that was our age fifteen 3'ears ago. While his interests princi- 
pally weave themselves about young persons of the opposite sex, surely 
he is still a boy, be he ever so old a bachelor, and that was our age until 
we were married. Then, through the hard fighting-time, while he struggles 
harder that his children may struggle less, we call him middle-aged. 
When this has passed, I think he must be just about the age of his grand- 
children. 

So we go our ways. The old enthusiasms are tempered ; we express 
them with the mildness, even with that peculiar absent-mindedness which 
comes to men who are " raising families." Yet do none of us forget the 
tie that is between us, and even in this fighting-time we remember that 
we march onward in company : and the outward sign of that ever-existent 
companionship is this book where we are enrolled. 

Accept it, not-yet-venerable men ! Divested of levity and appropriately, 
nay, mathematically serious as j'^ou will find it, there are some old pictures 
in it for you, and a music of other days. Here and there it will bring up 
to you a boy's laughing face ; or you may find j'-ourself, by some magic, 
lying prone before Old North on the campus in the shadows of a June 
morning ; you ma}^ hear yourself go singing with old young comrades 
through Al'Cosh walk ; a half- forgotten cry may ring again in your ears 
— perhaps it will be, " Hello-o-o Snake A-A-Andrews ! " 

And so I think very few of us will turn the following pages without 
emotion. We are too busy and too practical, I hear, for much chanting of 

" Wild with all regret, 

O Death in Life, the days that are no more ! " 

And probably very few of us, given the choice by a fairy godmother, 
would elect to " change back " into undergraduate life again. But think 



what a good and glorious life it was ! We grow away from it, farther 
and farther, with the flying years. We mustn't get too far : to lose it 
quite would be a loss indeed, and irreparable to the loser. 

Then come and take the steps once more for a little while. (Herb. 
Rogers, give us the key.) And as the other classes gather under the elms 
and stretch themselves on the grass to listen in the spring moonlight, let's 
begin with " Annie Lisle." Vale ! 

B. T. 

10 



DIRECTORY 



Note. — Where two addresses are given the first is the business one, the second the residence. 

The letters following a name indicate the degree or degrees received from Princeton. When a 
degree has been received from some other institution of learning, the initials of the University 
conferring the degree are placed in parenthesis before the initials of the degree. 

In the case of those who spent only a part of the four years with us, the time of leaving or 
joining the class is given. 



Andrew, Abram Piatt, Jr., A.B., (H.) A.M., Ph.D., 

Assistant Professor of Economics, Harvard University, 
lo Russell Hall, Cambridge, ]\Iass. 
UNMARRIED. 

Entered class, 1890. 



Angell, Charles Hart, A.B., 

Assistant Actuary, Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company, 

413 ]\Iain Street, Springfield, Mass. 

41 High Street, Springfield, Mass. 
MARRIED, October 10, 1900, Miss Jessie F. Speer. 
CHILDREN: July 13, 1901, Irving J. and Theodore F. (twins). 



Baird, Edgar Wright, 

Manufacturer, 

1515 Sansom Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 

Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa. 
MARRIED, April 15, 1896, IMiss T^Iabel Rogers. 
CHILDREN: April 5, 1897, Edgar W., Jr.; October 27, 1898, Gainor 

Owen; July i, 1900, Marian Wister. 



Baker, H. B., 

Builder, 

156 Fifth Avenue, New York City. 

8 West Fifty-seventh Street, New York City. 
MARRIED, November 19, 1898, Virginia Lee. 
CHILDREN : July 10, 1900, H. Martyn. 

Entered class, 1890. 

Left class, 1892. 

II 



Baker, William Osborn, B.A., A.M., 

Clergyman, 

Trinity Rectory, Haverhill, Mass. 

28 Mount Vernon Street, Haverhill, Mass. 
MARRIED, August 3, 1899, Miss Elizabeth Jackson. 
CHILDREN: May 15, 1900, Charles Carroll; Oct. 6, 1906, Mary Osborn. 



Barkley, William J., C.E., 

Sugar Merchant and Planter, 

219 North Peters Street, New Orleans, La. 

1745 Prytania Street, New Orleans, La. 
MARRIED, January 24, 1899, Miss Minnie Norton Buckner. 
CHILDREN : November 12, 1900, Minnie Buckner ; November 30, 1901, 

John, Jr. ; November t.'j, 1903, Newton Buckner. 



Barnett, Charles A., 

Lawyer, 

2203 Farmers' Bank Building, Pittsburg, Pa. 

Beaver, Beaver County, Pa. 
MARRIED, December 2, 1905, Miss Lucy Kurtz. 
CHILDREN : September 27, 1906, Nancy Catherine. 

Entered class, i^ 

Left class, 1889. 



Beach, Horatio S., A.B., 

Clergyman, 

R. F. D. No. 2, Marshallville, Kan. 
MARRIED, December 14, 1897, Miss Lydia A. Carstens. 
CHILDREN: June 5, 1899, Kenneth Clancy; January 3, 1901, Dorothy 

Carstens ; February 21, 1903, Neal Meredith ; October 17, 1905, Leslie 

McKnight. 



Beatty, Lee Clark, A.B., 

Lawyer, 

420 Frick Building, Pittsburg, Pa. 

1422 Nixon Street, Allegheny, Pa. 
UNMARRIED. 
POLITICAL OFFICES FIELD: Assistant City Solicitor of Allegheny, 

Pa., 1906-1907 ; City Solicitor of Allegheny, Pa., 1907 ; Assistant City 

Solicitor of Pittsburg, Pa., 1908. 

Entered class, 1890. 



Betts, Hobart Dom.inick, E.E., 

Electrical Manufacturer, 

299 Broadway, New York City. 

264 West Fifty-seventh Street, New York City. 
MARRIED, June 11, 1903, Miss Josephine Gould. 
CHILDREN : June, 1904, Hobart D., Jr. 

12 



Beveridge, James, A.B., 

Manufacturer of Specialties in Leather and Iron, 
95 Chambers Street, New York City. 
255 West Ninety-seventh Street, New York City. 
MARRIED, October 10, 1900, Miss Anna Preston Lamb. 

Bigler, A. B., 

Mining, 

Santa Maria, Cal. 
MARRIED, and has two children. 
Entered class, 1889. 
Left class, 1890. 

Bigler, A. W., 

Coal Operator. 
Clearfield, Pa. 
UNMARRIED. 

Entered class, 1889. 
Left class, 1891. 

Bigler, G. R., 

Lawyer, 
Clearfield, Pa. 
MARRIED. 

Entered class, 1889. 
Left class, 1890. 

Black, James D., A.B., E.E., (C.) LL.B., 

Farming, 
Jobstown, N. J. 
UNMARRIED. 

Bogue, Hamilton B., Jr., A.B., (N. W. Univ.) LL.B., 

Real Estate Broker, 
820 Tribune Building, Chicago, 111. 
4841 Madison Avenue, Chicago, III. 
UNMARRIED. 

Borcherling, Frederick A., A.B., 

Lawyer, 

810 Broad Street, Newark, N. J. 
19 James Street, Newark, N. J. 
MARRIED, May 28, 1901, Miss Frances H. Gummere. 

Boynton, Charles Edward, A.B., (P. & S.) M.D., 

Physician, 

203-204 Peters Building, Atlanta, Ga. 

707 Piedmont Avenue, Atlanta, Ga. 
MARRIED, December 19, 1899, Miss Estelle Pattillo. 
CHILDREN : Oct. 8, 1900, Charles E., Jr. ; Oct. 3, 1906, Estelle Pattillo. 

13 



Brewster, Eugene V., 

La\v3'er, 

26 Court Street Brooklyn, N. Y. 

83 Midwood Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. 
MARRIED, May 10, 1893, Miss Emilie C. Churbiick. 
CHILDREN: February 21, 1895, Ruth; April 14, 1898, Eugene Raphael; 

September 17, 1900, Marie Theresa. 

Entered Princeton, 1889. 

Left Princeton, 1890. 

Bridges, Henry W., A.B., (N. Y. L.) LL.B., 

Lawyer, 

41 Wall Street, New York City. 
103 East Twenty-ninth Street, New York City. 
UNMARRIED. 

Britton, James H., 

Silk Manufacturer, 
487 Broadway, New York City. 
Cumberland, Md. 
UNMARRIED. 

Entered class, 1889. 
Left class, 1891. 

Brokaw, Irving, A.B., (N. Y. L.) LL.B., 

Lawyer, 

985 Fifth Avenue, New York City. 
MARRIED, February 4, 1903, Miss Lucile Nave. 
CHILDREN: Dec. 11, 1903, Lucile Barbara; May 25, 1906, Mignon Elvira. 

Brown, Irving Swan, 

No occupation, 

Worcester, ]\Iass. 
]\IARRIED, September 10, 1896, Miss Blanche Albertson. 
CHILDREN : ^lay i, 1898, Frances Clayton. 

Entered class, 1889. 

Left class, 1891. 

Brown, Kenneth, A.B., M.A., 

]vlinister, 

Dawson, N. Mex. 
MARRIED, November 19, 1897, Miss Frances Wolverton. 
CHILDREN: January 11, 1901, Kenneth, Jr. 

Brown, W. Harman, Jr., (U. S. N. Y.) LL.B., 

Treasurer, 

176 Federal Street, Boston, Mass. 

359 Tappan Street, Brookline, Mass. 
j\L\RRIED, October 7, 1897, Miss Joan Nott Howe. 
CHILDREN : October 31, 1899, W. Harman 3d; September 8, 1903, Abbott 

Harman ; December 30, 1905, Joan Harman. 

Entered class, 1889. 

Left class, 1892. 

14 



Bryan, R. Shepard, (Wash. Univ.) M.D., 

Physician, 

Century Building, St. Louis, Mo. 
Missouri Athletic Club. 
UNMARRIED. 

Buchanan, Joseph Hervey, A.B., M.D., 

Physician, 

43 Duer Street, Plainfield, N. J. 
MARRIED, February 17, 1898, ^liss Lidie S. Collom. 
CHILDREN : December 27, 1899, ^lary Collom. 

Buckley, Richard Vaux, A.B., (U. of P.) LL.B., 

Lawyer, 

460 Drexel Building, Philadelphia, Pa. 
1508 Spruce Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 
UNMARRIED. 

Buist, Archibald Johnston, A.B., (Med. C. of S. C.) M.D., 

Physician, 

276 ]^Ieeting Street, Charleston, S. C. 
MARRIED, December 19, 1899, ^liss Alice S. Mitchell. 
CHILDREN : July 25, 1905, Archibald J., Jr. 

Byers, Isaac Wingerd, A.B., 

Lawyer, 

Iron River, Mich. 

MARRIED, July 23, 1893, Miss Dora Rosenback. 

CHILDREN : May 13, 1894, Anna Frederika ; March 4, 1900, Judith Eliza- 
beth ; December 19, 1905, Benjamin F. 

POLITICAL OFFICES HELD : Circuit Court Commr. ; Probate Judge. 

Cameron, James Daniel, A.B., A.M., 

Clergyman, 

Corinth, N. Y. 
MARRIED, November 15, 1899, ^Nliss Jessie Fremont Mackenzie. 
CHILDREN : September 6, 1900, Donald Kenzie. 

Carpenter, Charles TJ., A.B., 

President Herring-Hall-^Iarvin Safe Co., 

400 Broadway, New York City. 

120 Riverside Drive, New York City. 
MARRIED, November 20, 1895, ]\Iiss Lillian Hynson. 
CHILDREN : October, 1896, Kathryn Lee. 

Carter, Jesse Benedict, A.B., A.M. (Halle) Ph.D., 

Director American School of Classical Studies, 
Via Vicenza, 5, Rome, Italy. 
]\IARRIED, January 22, 1902, ]Miss Kate Benedict Freeman. 
Entered class, 1890. 

IS 



Gary, Luther H., 

Publisher, 

14 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass. 

13 Eaton Court, Wellesley Hills, Mass. 
MARRIED. 
CHILDREN : Rose, James, William, Charles. 

Entered class, i88q. 

Left class, 1891. 



Case, George "Warren, Jr., A.B., 

Lawyer, 

25 Broad Street, New York City. 

65 West Fifty-fourth Street, New York City. 
MARRIED, November 23, 1898, Miss Mary Anderson. 
CHILDREN : November 10, 1905, Anderson. 



Chandler, Jefferson Paul, A.B., 

Lawyer, 

407 L. A. Trust Building, Los Angeles, Cal. 
715 West Twenty-eighth Street, Los Angeles, Cal. 
MARRIED, June i, 1904, Miss Elizabeth Shankland. 



Chapin, Thomas Christy, C.E., 

Salesman, 

181 Gibbs Street, Newton Centre, Mass. 
MARRIED, June 14, 1899, Miss Annie Howard. 
CHILDREN : April 6, 1900, Ruth ; January 8, 1902, Barbara ; July 30, 

1905, Helen Spring; December 3, 1906, Constance; March 25, 1908, 

Thomas Christy, Jr. 



Cilley, Arthur Hutchins, A.B., (P. & S.) M.D., 

Physician, 

138 East Thirty-seventh Street, New York City. 
MARRIED, July 9, 1900, Miss Anna Richardson Hollis. 
CHILDREN : September i, 1907, John Kelly 2d. 



Clausen, Henry P. A., 

Real Estate Broker and Trustee, 

II Regent Street, Brookline, Mass. 
MARRIED, June 12, 1894, Miss Bertha Rueter. 
CHILDREN : October 5, 1895, Frances Marie. 

Entered class, 1890. 

Left class, 1892. 



Clay, Woodford, A.B., 

Breeder of Thoroughbred Horses, 
Paris, Ky. 
UNMARRIED. 

16 



Cochran, Samuel, A.B., (C.) M.D., 

Medical Missionary, 

Hwai Yuen, China (via Nanking). 
MARRIED, May lo, 1899, :Miss ^largaret King Watts. 
CHILDREN : May i, 1900, Margaret Watts ; September 4, 1903, Lois ; 

June 6, 1907, William Watts. 

Entered class, 1890. 

Condict, Walter Halsted, A.B., 

Lawyer, 

15 Exchange Place, Jersey City, N. J. 

130 Jewett Avenue, Jersey City, N. J. 
MARRIED, December 30, 1903, Miss Anna Hamilton Yeaman. 
CHILDREN : March 12, 1907, Yeam.an Halsted. 

Conover, Edward F., 

Dealer in Electrical Supplies, 
Morristown, N. J. 
Bayard Lane, Princeton, N. J. 
UNMARRIED. 
Left class, 1891. 

Crago, Thomas S., A.B., (W. C.) A.B., 

Lawyer, 

Waynesburg, Pa. 

West Franklin Street, Waynesburg, Pa. 
MARRIED, October 27, 1897, Miss Margaret L. Hoge. 
CHILDREN : February 3, 1902, Leah Abigail ; June 24, 1903, John Hughes ; 

April, 1907, Ruth Constance. 

Entered class, 1892. 

Daniels, Harrison Roberts, A.B., 

Secretary, The Pinneo & Daniels Co., 

Care of Pinneo & Daniels Co., Da^^ton, Ohio. 

424 West First Street, Dayton, Ohio. 

MARRIED, April 6, 1898, Miss Mary Pierce Davies. 

CHILDREN : September 10, 1900, Samuel Davies ; August 12, 1902, Har- 
rison Roberts, Jr. 

Davidson, W. R., 

W^holesale Grocer, 

218 Market Street, Steubenville, Ohio. 
511 North Fourth Street, Steubenville, Ohio. 
UNMARRIED. 

Davis, Henry S., 

Lawyer, 

no Columbia Heights, Brooktyn, N. Y. 
MARRIED. 
POLITICAL OFFICES HELD : Asst. Dist. Atty. Kings Co., N. Y. 

Entered class, 1889. 

Left class, 1890. 

17 



Davis, Parke Hill, A.B., A.M., 

District Attorney, Northampton County. 

22 South Third Street, Easton, Pa. 

241 Spring Garden Street, Easton, Pa. 
MARRIED, June 29, 1898, Miss Edith Knecht Detwiller. 
CHILDREN: July 15, 1899, EHzabeth Virginia; December 11, 1901, 

Katharine ; February 12, 1904, John Detwiller ; January 20, 1906, 

Cynthia Parke. 



Dear, Joseph Albert, Jr., A.B., 

Managing Editor, 

The Evening Journal, Jersey City, N. J. 

146 Harrison Avenue, Jersey City, N. J. 
MARRIED, October 21, 1897, Julia Allene Reid. 
CHILDREN: January 16, 1899, Joseph Albert 3d; March 15, 1901, Bertha 

Allene ; June 18, 1906, Helen. 



Dice, William Gordan, A.B., (P. & S.) M.D., 

Physician, 

240 Michigan Street, Toledo, Ohio. 

2307 Glenwood Avenue, Toledo, Ohio 
MARRIED, April 14, 1902, Miss Gertrude McClure. 
CHILDREN : June 20, 1907, Jane McClure. 

Entered class, 1890. 



Dodd, John N., A.B., 

Electrical Engineer, 

Care of S. T. Dodd, iioi Nott Street, Schenectady, N. Y. 
MARRIED, September 19, 1900, Miss Flora Melovidoff Elliott. 
CHILDREN : Sept. 20, 1902, Dorothy ; April 3, 1904, Flora Alexandra. 



Dodd, William Henry, A.B., A.M., 

Clergyman, 

De Graaf Building, Albany, N. Y. 

3 Leonard Place, Albany, N. Y. 
MARRIED, September 15, 1897, Miss Rena M. Lapham. 
CHILDREN : March 4, 1899, William H., Jr. ; April 21, 1902, Sara A. 



Doolittle, Alfred A., 

Thirty-fifth & K Streets, N. W., Washington, D. C. 

Doolittle left our class in Freshman year, returning to Princeton to 

enter as a regular student with the Class of 'g6, in whose record 

books he is regularly listed. 

Driscoll, Robert, Jr., A.B., (N. Y. L.) LL.B., 

Rancher, 

Robstown, Texas. 
UNMARRIED. 

18 



DxiBois, Howard W., 

Mining Engineer, 

302 Harrison Building, Philadelphia, Pa. 

4108 Spruce Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 
MARRIED. June 15, 1897, Miss Frances C. Higbee. 
CHILDREN : Howard H. and Kathryn Vassor. 

Entered class, 1891. 

Left class, 1891. 

Durland, Daniel Clarence, E.E., 

First Vice-President, Sprague Electric Company, 

527 West Thirty-fourth Street, New York City. 

345 West Eighty-fifth Street, New York City. 
MARRIED, October 6, 1896, Miss Laura Young. 
CHILDREN : February 3, 1898, William Reginald. 

Entered class, 1889. 

Left class, 1894. 

Dwight, Ellsworth Everett, 

Manufacturer, 

63 Wall Street, New York City. 
36 Franklin Street, Morristown, N. J. 
MARRIED, April 4, 1907. 

Easton, John S., A.B., (P. & S.) M.D., 

Physician, 

524 Pennsylvania Avenue, Pittsburg, Pa. 

3200 Forbes Street, Pittsburg, Pa. 
MARRIED, November 15, 1900, Miss Ellen C. Holden. 
CHILDREN : October 15, 1906, John S., Jr. 

Entered class, 1890. 

Edwards, Ogden M., Jr., B.S., (C. U.) M.D., 

Physician, 

5607 Fifth x\venue, Pittsburg, Pa. 
MARRIED, November 29, 1898, ^liss Lela Harkness. 
CHILDREN : September 7, 1899, jNIartha H. ; October 5, 1903, Lela H. ; 

January 8, 1905, Harkness. 

Eg-bert, Albert, 

Musician, 

Care of Dr. Seneca Egbert, 4814 Springfield Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. 
UNMARRIED. 

Elder, Frederick S., A.B., A.M., 

Solicitor for Bankers' Life Association of Des Moines, Iowa. 

343 New York Life Building, Kansas Cit}^ Mo. 

816 East Thirty-third Street, Kansas City, Mo. 
AIARRIED, November 30, 1893, Miss Cora Shreves. 
CHILDREN: September 13, 1896, Dorothy Louise; November 2, 1901, 

Marjorie Lahoma; February 5, 1903, Elizabeth; August 12, 1907, 

Thomas Shreves. 

Entered class, 1890. 

19 



Erdman, George L., A.B., 

Treasurer, Balfour Quarry Co., 
62 Patton Avenue, Asheville, N. C. 
295 S. French Broad Avenue, Asheville, N. C. 
UNMARRIED. 

Ewing, James Falconer, A.B., A.M., 

Teacher, 

Portland Academy, Portland, Ore. 

610 Sprmg Street, Portland, Ore. 
MARRIED, June i, 1898, Miss Caroline Ladd Steel. 
CHILDREN: Dec. 7, 1900, Thomas Davis; Sept. 21, 1902, Margaret. 

Entered class, 1891. 

Ferguson, Huber, A.B., 

Minister, 

30 Douglas Avenue, Mansfield, Ohio. 
MARRIED, June 24, 1896, Miss Caroline M. Kraeer. 
CHILDREN: April 29, 1897, Kraeer; July 30, 1898, Helen; Nov. 28, 1903, 

Charlotte Jane ; March 6, 1904, Robert Gracey, Jr. ; July 12, 1907, Paul. 

Entered class, 1892. 

Ferguson, Wilson, A.B., 

Agent, 

Mint Arcade, Philadelphia, Pa. 

1 125 North Sixty-third Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 

MARRIED, November 14, 1900, Miss E. Shirley Brockunier. 

CHILDREN : August 25, 1901, Charles Brockunier ; April 16, 1903, Eliza- 
beth Brady; October 26, 1905, Shirley Brockunier. 

Fisher, Herbert Payne, B.S., (U. of P.) M.D., 

Physician, 

5324 Wayne Avenue, Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa. 
MARRIED, October 26, 1897, Miss Alma H. Murphy. 
CHILDREN : September 12, 1901, Lenore M. 

Entered class, 1891. 



Forman, Howard Sinnickson, B.S., (P. & S.) M.D., 

Physician, 

640 Bergen Avenue, Jersey City, N. J. 
MARRIED, October 31, ^904, Miss Edith Ratio Towar. 
CHILDREN : October 7, 1905, Randolph ; August 13, 1907, Rosaline. 

Fraser, George Corning, B.S., (Col. Univ.) LL.B., 

Lawyer, 

I Nassau Street, New York City. 

I Madison Avenue, Morristown, N. J. 
MARRIED, December 5, 1895, Miss Jane G. Tutt. 
CHILDREN: December 31, 1896, George Corning, Jr.; August 21, 1899, 

Myra T. ; December 17, 1901, Anna Corning; April 4, 1904, Jane Tutt. 

20 



Freund, William Lewis, A.B., 

Minister, 

12 Van Deventer Avenue, Princeton, N. J. 
UNMARRIED. 



Furst, John S., 

President of United States Sand-paper Co., 

Williamsport, Pa. 
MARRIED, January 27, 1898, Miss Pauline N. Houston. 
CHILDREN : May 30, 1902, Louise H. 

Entered class, 1889. 

Left class, 1889. 



Garmany, George Larcombe, A.B., 

Real Estate Broker, 

Drayton and St. Julian Streets, Savannah, Ga. 
13 Duffy Street East, Savannah, Ga. 
MARRIED, January 11, 1906, Miss ]Margaret Wade Hull. 



Granger Gordon, nee Commodore V. Granger, 

Supplies, 

American Supply Co., Apartado 114, Oaxaca, Mexico. 

Entered class, 1889. 

Left class, 1889. 



Granger, Henry G., 

Mining Engineer, 

Colombia Central Railroad, Ciudad Reyes, Colombia. 

Cartagena, Colombia, South America. 
MARRIED, December 25, 1904, Miss Maria Adelaide Cervera. 
CHILDREN : September 6, 1905, Arthur Otis, Jr. ; September 3, 1906, 

Ciceron Reves Angel ; September 25, 1907, Rafael. 
POLITICAL OFFICE HELD : United States Consulate Agent at Quibdo 

for eight years. 

Entered class, 1889. 

Left class, 1890. , 



Grant, Charles Travers, A.B., 

Lawyer, 

502 Hamilton Building, Akron, Ohio. 
Cu^-ahoga Falls, Ohio. 
MARRIED, January 15, 1898, IMiss Alnor Kittelberger. 



Greene, Everette Lent, A.B., 

Electrician, 

Ninety-sixth Street and First Avenue, New York City. 
382 Fourth Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. 
MARRIED, September 18, 1901, Miss Elsie Cooke. 

21 



Guild, William Alexander, A.B., 

Lawyer, 
Gallatin, Tenn. 
MARRIED, December 25, 1907, Miss Louise T. Allen. 

Hall, Keppele, E.E., 

President and General Manager The Keppele Hall Company, Consult- 
ing Engineers and Contractors, 
1111-1113 United Brethren Building, Dayton, Ohio. 
424 West First Street, Dayton, Ohio. 
MARRIED, April 9, 1896, Miss Fanny Southard Hay. 

Hallock, Henry Golloway Comingo, A.B., (Rich. U,) Ph.D., 

Missionary, 

18 Peking Road, Shanghai, China. 

10 Livingston Park, Rochester, N. Y. 
UNMARRIED. 
POLITICAL OFFICE FIELD : United States Envoy, Hangchow. 

Hard, S. W., 

At Leisure. 

Address, care of Mrs. S. B. Hard, Englewood, N. J. 
NOT MARRIED. 

Entered class, 1889. 
Left class, 1890. 

Harrington, Marshall, A.B., M.A., 

Minister, 

First Presbyterian Church, Marysville, Ohio. 
MARRIED, October 14, 1903, Miss Elizabeth Cathcart. 
CHILDREN : August 28, 1904, Marshall Cathcart. 

Entered class, 1890. 

Harris, Van Alen, C.E., 

General Manager The Juncos Central Company, 

Juncos, Porto Rico. 
MARRIED, January 26, 1904, Miss Edith Thacher. 
CHILDREN : March 9, 1905, Edith Thacher ; June 2, 1906, Catherine, 

Haiighwout, E. V., 

At Leisure. 

Mr. C. S. Haughwout, Cashier First National Bank, Denver, Col. 

Entered class, 1889. 

Left class, 1890. 

Hayden, W. Langdon, 

Mines, 

Care of Ontaria Development Co., Majestic Building, Detroit, Mich. 
MARRIED, August 15, 1894, Miss Louise Kinsman. 
Entered class, 1889. 
Left class, 1890. 

22 



Hencken, Albert C, 

Insurance Broker, 

52 Broadway, New York City. 

Greenwich, Conn. 
MARRIED, April 5, 1899, Miss Minnie C. O'Neill. 
CHILDREN : January 8, 1902, Hugh O'Neill. 



Henderson, Horace L., A.B., (U. of P.) LL.B., 

Lawyer, 

1420 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 

Cynwyd, Pa. 
MARRIED, April 29, 1903, Miss Bertha Taylor Brown. 
CHILDREN: December 11, 1904, Marjorie Lyman; October 3, 1907, 

JMartha Elizabeth. 



Hoffman, Miles A., 

Merchant, 

40 Trinity Square, London E. C, England. 

Gatton Point, Redhill, Surrey, England. 
MARRIED, 1899. (Widower.) 
CHILDREN : 1900, Miles A. H. 

Entered class, 1891. 

Left class, 1892. 



Houston, Gavin Nelson, C.E., 

Consulting Engineer, 

State Engineer's Office, State House, Denver, Col. 

21 18 South Milwaukee Avenue, Denver, Col. 
MARRIED, June 20, 1894, Miss Jennie Throssell. 
CHILDREN: May i, 1895, Dorothy May; Nov. 22, 1896, Martha Isabell. 



Howe, Fisher, 

Banking, 
Princeton, N. J. 
UNMARRIED. 

Entered class, 1889. 
Left class, 1890. 



Howland, H. A., 

Titusville, Pa. 

Howland zvas zvith us only six months Freshman year. He reentered 
Princeton' with Class of '94, and is listed with them. 



Hudson, William M., A.B., (— ) A.B., Ph.D., 

Minister, Prest. Waynesburg College, 
Waynesburg, Pa. 
MARRIED, June 27, 1905, Miss Florence Ronald Barclay. 
Entered class, 1892. 

23 



Hughes, Charles Stone, A.B., 

Bellefont Academy, Bellefont, Pa. 
MARRIED, March 21, 1901, Miss Emma Virginia Graham. 
CHILDREN : December 13, 1905, James Potter, Jr. 



Humphreys, Charles E., B.S., 

District Engineer, Bell Telephone Company, 

2002 Tioga Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 

Narberth, Pa. 
MARRIED, December 22, 1896, Miss Florence Kennedy. 
CHILDREN : February 14, 1898, Colwyn K. ; August 15, 1899, Owen ; 

August 22, 1900, Edith J. 



Hurd, Clarence H., C.E., 

Civil Engineer, 

Nevada-California Power Company, Bishop, Cal. 
1613 Providence Street, Brookland, D. C. 
MARRIED, April 5, 1905, Miss Grace Lewis. 



Inslee, Heber Clyde, C.E., 

Mechanical Engineer, 

Babcock & Wilcox Company, Bayonne, N. J. 
50 Spruce Street, Newark, N. J. 
UNMARRIED. 



Ivins, John Wardell, A.B., 

Lawj^er, 

Red Bank, N. J. 
MARRIED, 1906, Miss Julia E. Deacy. 
Entered class, 1891. 



Jackson, Eliot Gregory, 

Buyer, 

100-150 Kansas Street, care of Dunham, Carrigan & Hayden Company, 

San Francisco. 
2736 Filbert Street, San Francisco, Cal. 
MARRIED, November 5, 1903, Miss Mollie Bray. 
Entered class, 1889. 
Left class, 1890. 



Johnson, William Throckmorton, A.B., 

Student, 

228 West Nineteenth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 
no Grand Avenue, Asbury Park, N. J. 
UNMARRIED. 

24 



Keedy, Henry H., Jr., 

Law3'er, 

West Washington Street, Hagerstown, ]\Id. 

Prospect Street, Hagerstown, j\Id. 
MARRIED, April 26, 1899, Miss Laura Virginia Loose. 
CHILDREN : Aug. 25, 1900, Laura Virginia ; Aug. 30, 1905, Julia Lane. 

Entered class, 1889. 

Left class, 1890. 



Kellogg, Augustus C, A.B., 

Presbyterian Minister, 
659 Newark Avenue, Elizabeth, N. J. 
Cairo, N. Y. 
UNMARRIED. 



Kellogg, Frederic S., A.B., A. M., (U. of P.) M.D., 

Physician, 

302 North Highland Avenue, Pittsburg, Pa. 

62^ Herran Avenue, Pittsburg, Pa. 
MARRIED, October 3, 1903, Miss Gertrude Chew. 
CHILDREN : July 31, 1904, Frederic Hartwell. 

Entered class, 1891. 



Kellogg, William Day, A.B., (N. Y. L.) LL.B., 

LawA-er, 

Saranac Lake, N. Y. 
659 Newark Avenue, Elizabeth, N. J. 
UNMARRIED. 



King, Philip, A.B., 

Merchant, 

King's Palace, Washington, D. C. 

Imperial Apartment, Washington, D. C. 
MARRIED, Januarv 17, 1905, ]^Iiss Jeannette Ruth Harris. 
CHILDREN : April 17, 1908, Philip, Jr. 



Kirtland, Kenneth Campbell, B.S., (N. Y.) LL.B., 

Lawyer, 

170 Broadwa}^, New York City. 
483 ]\Iain Street, East Orange, N. J. 
UNMARRIED. 



Klots, George, C.E., 

Silk Manufacturer, 
487 Broadway, New York City. 
Lawrence, Long Island, N. Y. 
]^IARRIED, November i, 1905, ]\Iiss Elizabeth Watson Ives. 



Lawrence, Edward A., A.B., (N. Y. L.) LL.B., 

Patent Lawyer, 

Berger Building, Pittsburg, Pa. 

174 Rodgers Avenue, Bellevue, Pa. 

MARRIED, April 10, 1902, Miss Jean Nevin Cooper. 

CHILDREN : Dec. 29, 1902, Jean Cooper ; May 2, 1904, Edward Hamlin. 

POLITICAL OFFICES HELD : Five years Corporation Counsel, Sharps- 
burg, Pa. 
Entered class, 1891. 

Lester, Felix H., A.B., 

Lawyer, 

Rooms 5 and 7, First National Bank Building, Albuquerque, N. M. 

1 1 16 West Central Avenue, Albuquerque, N. M. 
MARRIED, February 10, 1896, Miss Marion M. Merritt. 
CHILDREN : March 23, 1899, Lorna. 

Little, Lucius Freeman, 

Managing Director, Alsop Flour Process, Ltd., 
21 Mincing Lane, London. 
Owensboro, Ky. 
UNMARRIED. 

Entered class, 1889. 
Left class, 1892. 

Lord, Caleb Wheeler, (Lehigh) M.E., 

Manufacturer, 

1831 Juniata Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 

338 Manheim Street, Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa. 
MARRIED, June 16, 1897, Miss Josephine Chapman. 
CHILDREN: April 4, 1901, James 2d; March 11, 1905, Wheeler, Jr. 

Entered class, 1889. 

Left class, 1892. 

Ludington, Dwight M., A.B., 

Lawyer, 

Law Building, Baltimore, Md. 
MARRIED, November 6, 1901, Miss Sara Leib. 
CHILDREN : September 10, 1902, D. M., Jr. ; May 9, 1905, Frank Leib. 

McAlpin, Benjamin B., A.B., (N. Y.) LL.B., 

Lawyer, 

68 William Street, New York City. 

125 East Fifty-seventh Street, New York City. 
MARRIED, November 10, 1897, Miss Alice Townsend Martin. 
CHILDREN: December 3, 1898, Benjamin B., Jr.; January 14, 1901, 

Donald Martin; October 5, 1903, Townsend Martin. 

McClunipha, L. H., 

Builder, 

51 Union Street, Amsterdam, N. Y. 
MARRIED, June 21, 1893, Miss Gertrude A. Groot. 
CHILDREN: August 31, 1895, WilHam K. 

Entered class, 1889. 

Left class, 1891. 

26 



MacGaffin, Alexander, 

Lockport, N. Y. 

On account of ill health McGaifin left our class in Freshman year, re- 
turning the following one as a regular student with '94, in whose 
record hooks he is regularly listed. 



Macloskie, George, Jr., C.E., 

Electrical Engineer, 

General Electric Company, Schenectady, N. Y. 

3 Parkwood Boulevard, Schenectady, N. Y. 
MARRIED, January 4, 1905, Miss Cora Wilhelmi. 
CHILDREN : May 18, 1906, Adaline. 



Marrow, William. Chamberlaine, 

Metropolitan Club, Washington, D. C. 
UNMARRIED. 

Entered class, 1890. 
Left class, 1891. 



Maury, Frank F., 

Care Dr. J. P. Hutchinson, 1702 Locust Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 
UNMARRIED. 

Entered class, 1889. 
Left class, 1890. 



Miller, Gardiner Hope, A.B., 

Cotton Commission Merchant. 

50 Cotton Exchange, New York City. 

16 West Sixty-ninth Street, New York City. 
MARRIED, September 19, 1906, Miss Emma Achelis. 
CHILDREN : August 21, 1907, Hope. 



Miller, James Alexander, A.B., A.M., (P. & S.) M.D., 

Physician, 

18 West Fifty-first Street, New York City. 

550 Park Avenue, New York City. 
MARRIED, June 4, 1902, Miss Marian C. Hunt. 
CHILDREN : February 6, 1904, Constance ; July 5, 1907, Marian. 



Mills, Frederick H., (Jeff.) M.D., 

Surgeon, U. S. A., 
Fort Flagler, Washington. 
South Dayton, N. Y. 
MARRIED, December 30, 1896, Miss Adeline Robbins. 
Entered class, 1889. 
Left class, 1891. 

27 



Moffitt, Luther R., A.B., 

Teacher, 

173 Ransom Street, Grand Rapids, Mich. 
1705 N. Front Street, Harrisbnrg, Pa. 
UNMARRIED. 

Montgomery, Charles H., A.B., 

Dealer in Salt, 
Warsaw, N. Y. 
UNMARRIED. 

Montgomery, Lee, A.B., 

Lawyer, 

112 West Fourth Street, Sedalia, Mo. 

711 West Sixth Street, Sedalia, Mo. 
MARRIED, May 26, 1897, Miss Elizabeth Paschall Zimmerman. 
CHILDREN: February 19, 1898, Elizabeth; September, 4, 1899, John; 

November 26, 1901, Elinor; January 2, 1906, Lees; February 7, 1908, 

Benjamin W. 

Entered class, 1890. 

Moore, Howard, C.E., 

Professor of Engineering, Colorado College. 
1 140 Wood Avenue, Colorado Springs, Col. 
UNMARRIED. 

Morris, DuBois Schank, A.B., 

Missionary, 

Hwai Yuen, China (via Nanking). 
20 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y. 
UNMARRIED. 

Mullen, R. M., C.E., 

Civil Engineer, 
Indiana, Pa. 
UNMARRIED. 

Murray, George B.., 

Athletic Treasurer. 
90 Nassau Street, Princeton. 
162 Mercer Street, Princeton, N. J. 
MARRIED, September 5, 1906, Miss Etta T. Clayton. 

Murray, Harold G., B.S., 

Secretary Committee of Fifty, Princeton University, 

52 Wall Street, New York City. 

Fox Lane, Flushing, New York. 
MARRIED, July i, 1902, Miss Florence M. Eilbeck. 
CHILDREN: February 12, 1904, Charlotte Ellen; June 10, 1906, Lindley; 

March 29, 1908, Audrey. 
POLITICAL OFFICES HELD: Secretary Commissioner of Health, 

New York City; Secretary Board of Water Supply of New York. 

28 



Neely, David Torence, A.B., 

Minister, 

1641 North Caroline Street, Baltimore, Md. 
MARRIED, December 26, 1896, Miss Sara Herr Shelley. 

Newton, C. Bertram, A.B., 

Teacher, 

Woodhull House, Lawrenceville, N. J. 
^lARRIED, June 28, 1899, :\Iiss Carol H. Cooke. 
CHILDREN : November 26, 1900, Lois ; June 28, 1902, David ; August 4, 

1904, Theodore; November 12, 1905, Joy. 



Nicely, John W., A.B., M.A., 

Minister, 

5700 Prairie Ave., Chicago, 111. 

5828 South Park Avenue, Chicago, 111. 
MARRIED, June 22, 1898, I\Iiss Helen Nesbit Mount. 
CHILDREN : June 18, 1899, James Mount ; Dec. 24, 1900, Harold Elliott. 

Entered class, 1891. 



North, Alfred M., 

Treasurer American Metal Works, 
^26-328 Armat Street, Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa. 
117 W. Chelten Avenue, Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa. 
UNMARRIED. 

Entered class, 1890. 
Left class, 1892. 



Norton, Edward Russell, C.E., 

Wholesale Coal Merchant, 

85 Water Street, Boston, J\Iass., or i Broadway, New York City, 
41 Powell Street, Brookline, Mass. 
MARRIED, September 21, 1904, ]Miss Lillian Weriship Hyde. 



Palmer, Edward R., A.B., (U. of L.) M.D., 

Physician, 

721 W. Jefferson Street, Louisville, Ky. 

5 Main Street, Jefferson Town, Ky. 
MARRIED, February 6, 1905, jNIiss ^larv G. McCann. 
CHILDREN : June 5, 1907, iMary E. 



Pardee, Calvin, Jr., 

Assistant Superintendent, 

Lattimer IMines, Hazleton, Pa. 
MARRIED, 1905. 
CHILDREN : One boy. 

Entered class, 1889. 

Left class, 1891. 

29 



Parker, Arthur D., 

Merchant, 

227 Tchoupitsales Street, New Orleans, La. 

3202 Prytania Street, New Orleans, La. 
MARRIED, November 24, 1903, Miss Grace Morton Phillips. 
CHILDREN : September 12, 1904, Arthur D., Jr. ; September 22, 1905, 

Robert Moore and James Phillips (twins). 

Entered class, 1889. 

Left class, 1891. 

Patton, Francis Landey, Jr., A.B., 

Lawyer, 

40 Wall Street, New York, N. Y. 
306 West Ninety-fourth Street, New York, N. Y. 
MARRIED, April 30, 1903, Miss Jessie Campbell Mclntyre. 

Paul, John Shelden, 

Monrovia, Cal. 

Care of S. S. Paul, Bretton Hall, New York, N. Y. 
UNMARRIED. 

Perry, Wesley Vick, A.B., (N. Y. L.) LL.B., 

Lawyer, 

Russellville, Ky. 
MARRIED, July 2, 1903, Miss Jeanette Johnson. 
CHILDREN : June 27, 1904, Wesley Vick, Jr. ; Mary Elizabeth and George 

William. 
POLITICAL OFFICE HELD: State Representative. 

Entered class, 1892. 

Phillips, Alex. McAlpin, 

Secretary, Mercer County Tax Board, and Newspaper Correspondent, 

Mercer County Court House, Trenton, N. J. 

308 West State Street, Trenton, N. J. 
MARRIED, February 22, 1894, Miss Jennie Elizabeth Williams. 
CHILDREN : January 7, 1895, Elsie McAlpin. 

Entered class, 1889. 

Left class, 1892. 

Pollison, William Elmer, A.B., 

Teacher, 

Waverly Park, N. J. 
UNMARRIED. 



Poole, Harry Otis, A.B., 

Lawyer, 

339 Powers Building, Rochester, N. Y. 

60 Westminster Road, Rochester, N. Y. 
MARRIED, September 22, 1903, Miss Nannette R. Delano. 
CHILDREN : June 23, 1905, Elizabeth Delano. 

30 



Porter, James Wiken, Jr., 

President of Carroll-Porter Boiler & Tank Company, 
907 Empire Building, Pittsburg, Pa. 
Sewickley, Pa. 
UNMARRIED. 

Entered class, 1889. 
Left class, 1891. 

Post, Bertram Van Dyck, A.B., ( — ) M.D., 

Physician, 

Robert College, Constantinople, Turkey. 
MARRIED, December 26, 1901, Miss Caroline Hyde Hardin. 
CHILDREN : Dec. 21, 1902, Dorothy Isabel ; Oct. 4, 1905, George Hardin. 

Proudfit, Alexander Couper, A.B., (B. U.) A.B., 

Patent Lawyer, 

105 East Twenty-second Street, New York, N. Y. 

27 Washington Square, North, New York, N. Y. 
UNMARRIED. 
POLITICAL OFFICE HELD : Commr. N. Y. State Custodial Asylum. 

Randolph, Mervyn P., E.E., 

Mining, 

Goldfield, Nevada. 

1410 Belmont Avenue, Seattle, Wash. 
MARRIED, June 10, 1903, Miss Elizabeth C. Bowman. 
Entered class, 1890. 
Left class, 1893. 

Reed, Albert Granberry, (V. U.) A.B., (Y.) A.M., (H.) Ph.D., 

Teacher, 

University of Missouri, Columbia, Mo. 

712 Providence Road, Columbia, Mo. 
MARRIED, December 22, 1898, ]\Iiss Margaret McDearmon. 
CHILDREN : Sept. 17, 1899, Albert Granberry ; Oct. 2, 1902, Mary Boston. 

Entered class, 1889. 

Left class, 1890. 

Reid, William J., A.B., 

Clergyman, 

First United Presbyterian Church, Fifth Ave., Oakland, Pittsburg, Pa. 

920 Aiken Avenue, Pittsburg, Pa. 
MARRIED, July 28, 1896, Miss Margaret Morbon Thompson. 
CHILDREN : August 25, 1897, Elizabeth Thompson ; August 7, 1899, Mary 

Bowen ; September 24, 1905, Janet Donaldson. 

Remsen, James Ditmars, C.E., 

Assistant Actuary, 

Columbian National Life Insurance Co., 180 Federal St., Boston, Mass. 
Hotel Beaconsfield, Brookline, Mass. 
MARRIED, October 27, 1906, Miss Melinda Gilbert Plimpton. 

31 



Biggs, Charles Trowbridge, A.B., 

Foreign Missionary, 

Bible House, Constantinople, Turkey, 

Roumeli Hissar, Constantinople, Turkey. 
MARRIED, June 9, 1900, Miss Mary Randle Steele. 
CHILDREN: Nov. 19, 1901, Sarah Randle; Aug. 23, 1904, Charles T., Jr. 



Bitchy, J. Warren, A.B., A.M., 

Teacher, 

Hughes High School, Cincinnati, Ohio. 

415 Considine Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio. 
MARRIED, November 25, 1895, Miss Belle McDiarmid. 
CHILDREN : August 5, 1900, Mary Elizabeth ; March i, 1907, Hugh McD. 

Entered class, 1890. 



Rodgers, John C, 

Accountant, 

225 North Twelfth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 
UNMARRIED. 

Entered class, 1889. 
Left class, 1891. 



Rogers, Herbert Milton, A.B., 

Hardware Merchant, 

1321 Farnam Street, Omaha, Neb. 

3718 Dewey Avenue, Omaha, Neb. 
MARRIED, June 4, 1898, Miss Anna C. Millard. 
CHILDREN: March 27, 1899, Milton; February 8, 1901, Millard H. ; April 

14, 1903, Helen. 



Rogers, James S., A.B., (U. of P.) LL.B., 

Lawyer, 

602 Commonwealth Building, Philadelphia, Pa. 

Haverford, Pa. 

MARRIED, April 26, 1904, Miss Agnes G. Klemm. 

CHILDREN: January 31, 1905, Eleanor Eastwick; January 19, 1907, Tal- 
bot Mercer. 

POLITICAL OFFICE HELD : Magistrate. 



RoUinson, Simeon H., 

Lawyer, 

Orange National Bank, Orange, N. J. 

93 Northfield Road, West Orange, N. J. 
MARRIED, June 4, 1904, Miss Ruth M. Small. 
CHILDREN : March 24, 1905, Keturah Crane. 
POLITICAL OFFICES HELD: Mayor of West Orange Town Council; 

Fish and Game Commissioner. 

Entered class, 1889. 

Left class, 1892. 

32 



Romero, Jose, A.B., M.A., (Mex. L. S.) LL.B., 

Lawyer, 

Apartado No. 1475, Mexico City, Mexico. 

UNMARRIED. 

POLITICAL OFFICES HELD: Secretary Mexican Embassy at Wash- 
ington, D. C. ; Department of Foreign Affairs of Mexico; Delegate to 
Farmers' Congress held in Denver, Col, 1901 ; Delegate Tenth Inter- 
national Geological Congress; Attache Mexican Delegation of Second 
Pan-American Conference ; Attache Alexican Delegation American 
Association of Public Health in 1900 and 1906; Secretary Third Pan- 
American Sanitary Convention. 



Sabine, William Tufnell, Jr., A.B., (N. Y. L.) LL.B., 

Lawyer, 

135 Broadway, New York City. 
960 Madison Avenue, New York City. 
UNMARRIED. 



Salter, John S., (Univ. of Paris) B.L., 

86 Revere Street, Boston, Mass. 

Care of J. G. Salter, Ocean City, N. J. 
MARRIED, 1895, Miss Meta R. M. Knox. 
CHILDREN : 1897, boy. 

Entered class, 1889. 

Left class, 1891. 



Sanders, Inman H., 

Cotton Merchant, 

Corinth, Miss. 
MARRIED, June 8, 1898, Miss Catherine Gay. 
CHILDREN : May 4, 1899, girl. 

Entered class, 1889. 

Left class, 1890. 



Satterthwaite, Pennington, B.S., 

Architect, 

27 East Twenty-second Street, New York City. 
The Princeton Club, New York, N. Y. 
UNMARRIED. 



Saxe, Martin, (N. Y. L.) LL.B., 

Lawyer and State Senator, 

280 Broadway, New York City. 

2345 Broadway, New York City. 
UNMARRIED. 
POLITICAL OFFICES HELD: Assistant Corporation Counsel; State 

Senator. 

Entered class, 1891. 

Left class, 1893. 

33 



Schilling-, Louis F., 

Mechanical Engineer., 

3400 Forbes Avenue, Pittsburg, Pa. 
MARRIED, October 12, 1904, Miss Olive Ray. 
CHILDREN : September 17, 1905, Ray. 

Entered class, 1890. 

Left class, 1892. 

Schultz, Elmer K., A.B., 

Fire Insurance Broker, 

425 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 

3446 North Carlisle Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 
MARRIED, August 18, 1892, Miss May A. Hirner. 
CHILDREN : July 2, 1893, Lloyd H. ; Nov. 19, 1897, Myriam Evelyn. 

Seibert, Edgar Calvin, (P. & S.) M.D., 

Physician, 

436 South Main Street, Orange, N. J. 
MARRIED, January 18, 1899, Miss Mary McLeod. 
Entered class, 1889. 
Left class, 1890. 

Shannon, Christian I., 

Broker, 

Ferguson Block, Pittsburg, Pa. 
Broad Street, Sewickley, Pa. 
MARRIED, June 2, 1898, Miss Ethel Elizabeth Standish. 
Entered class, 1891. 

Shelton, Richard Theodore, A.B., 

Wholesale Hatter, 

iioi Washington Avenue, St. Louis, Mo. 

4352 Westminster Place, St. Louis, Mo. 
MARRIED, April 2.^, 1899, Miss Allouise Douglass. 
CHILDREN : February 8, 1891, Caroline Shelton. 

Sherman, Clayton Fenn, A.B., 

Druggist, 

1340 State Street, Schenectady, N. Y. 
MARRIED, December 16, 1899, Miss Emma Moith. 

CHILDREN: May 20, 1901, Ruth Moith; December 8, 1903, Helen Amelia. 
POLITICAL OFFICE HELD : Postmaster. 



Sloss, Robert T., A.B., 

Author, 

270 West Fourth Street. 
MARRIED, September 4, 1893, Miss Emma Hill. 
CHILDREN: June 11, 1895, Julien Curtis; December 12, 1897, Warin 

Wilder; October 5, 1900, Hugh Howell. 

34 



Spiegel, William Leonard, A.B., A.M., 

Boiler Manufacturer, 

Pearl and Lawrence Streets, Cincinnati, Ohio. 
2618 Erie Avenue, Hyde Park, Cincinnati, Ohio. 
MARRIED, September 26, 1895, Miss Fannie Miller Strieker. 

Spooner, W. H., 

Lawyer, 

Herman Building, Milwaukee, Wis. 

Entered class, 1889. 

Left class, 1890. 

Stearns, Walter C, C.E., 

Raw Silk Importer, 

487 Broadway, New York City. 

Woodmere, N. Y. 
MARRIED, June 5, 1895, Miss Rebecca C. Potts. 
CHILDREN : November 3, 1896, WaUer C, Jr. ; October 10, 1898, Gilbert 

Potts; June 11, 1900, James Britton ; April 28, 1907, Dorothy. 

Stelle, Frederick W., A.B., (N. Y. L.) LL.B., 

Law3^er, 

68 William Street, New York City. 

148 East Thirty-sixth Street, New York City. 
MARRIED, November 18, 1907, Miss Margaret F. Cooley. 
POLITICAL OFFICES HELD : Assistant Corporation Counsel, Attorney 

State Departm.ent of Excise. 

Stockton, John, 

Civil and Electrical Engineer, 

1221 Washington Street, Hoboken, N. J. 
MARRIED, September 24, 1900, Mrs. Mary Frances Savage. 
CHILDREN: (step-daughter legally adopted), August 21, 1889, Nina 

Margaret Stockton ; November 2, 1905, Louise Pintard. 

Entered class, 1889. 

Left class, 1891. 

Sudler, Charles E. H., C.E., 

Civil Engineer, 

703 Laura Street, Jacksonville, Fla. 
UNMARRIED. 



Tarkington, Newton Booth, 

, Author, 

mo North Pennsylvania Avenue, Indianapolis, Ind. 
MARRIED, June, 1902, Miss Laurel Louise Fletcher. 
CHILDREN : Februar}^, 1906, Laurel Louise. 
POLITICAL OFFICE HELD : Member State Legislature. 

Entered class, 1891. 

Left class, 1893. 

35 



Tawney, Guy Allan, A.B., M.A., (Leipzig) Ph.D., 

Lecturer in Philosophy, 
University of Illinois, Urbana, 111. 
looi West California Avenue, Urbana, 111. 
UNMARRIED. 

Entered class, 1891. 
Left class, 1893. 

Thomas, Robert McKean, E.E., 

President, Thomas & Betts Company, 

299 Broadway, New York City. 

135 Madison Avenue, New York City. 
UNMARRIED. 
POLITICAL OFFICE HELD : Assistant Chief Inspector New York City 

Electrical Bureau. 

Entered class, 1890, 

Left class, 1893, 

Thompson, Alexander Marshall, A.B., 

Lawyer, 

728 Frick Building, Pittsburg, Pa. 

33S Pacific Avenue, Pittsburg, Pa. 
UNMARRIED. 
POLITICAL OFFICE HELD : Assistant City Solictor of Pittsburg. 

Thompson, John Bard, A.B., 

Lawyer, 

614 Broadway, South Sharon, Pa. 

Fruit Avenue, South Sharon, Pa. 
MARRIED, June 22, 1904, Katherine Portej. 
CHILDREN : March 18, 1905, Horace Bard. 

Tildsley, John L., A.B., 

Teacher of Economics, 

155 West Sixty-fifth Street, New York City. 

61 Arthur Street, Yonkers, N. Y. 
MARRIED, June 24, 1896, Miss Bertha A. Watters. 
CHILDREN : April 24. 1897, Jane ; January 2, 1899, John Lee ; December 

27, 1900, Margaret; July 19, 1904, Kathleen. 

Titsworth, Frederick Sheppard, C.E., (D. U.) A.B., (C. S. S. of M.) E.M., 

Assistant to General Attorney D. & R. G. R.R., 

Equitable Building, Denver, Col. 

1025 Pearl Street, Denver, Col. 
MARRIED, May 12, 1897, Miss Jane Marian Brown. 
CHILDREN: May 26, 1898, Junius Brown; July 12, 1891, Frances Grant; 

September 30, 1903, Marian Hooker. 

Tower, Rev. W. H., 

95 Chambers Street, New York City. 

Left the class in Freshman year to return the following as a member 
of '94, with which class he is listed as a graduate member. 

36 



Turner, Theodore Baker, A.B., 

Lecturer, 

Corning, Iowa. 
MARRIED, June 25, 1903, IMiss Ida Jane Okey. 
CHILDREN : Sept. 18, 1905, Almira Baker ; Feb. 19, 1907, John Harold. 

Wadsworth, Frank Herbert, A.B., 

LawA-er, 

35 Nassau Street, New York City. 

St. Paul's Road, Garden City, N. Y. 

MARRIED, April 14, 1898, J^Iiss Martha Lyon. 

CHILDREN : May 15, 1900, Frank Herbert, Jr. ; February 18, 1903, Flor- 
ence Choate, September 25, 1907, ]\Iorton Lyon. 

Warren, Ralph Herbert, 

Portland Cement IManufacturer. 

356 jNIarket Street, Bethlehem, Pa. 
MARRIED. September 15, 1898, Miss Susan A. Woolworth. 
CHILDREN : July 7, 1899, Eleanor W. ; August 24, 1902, ^lildred W. 

Entered class, 1889. 

Left class, 1891. 

Washburn, William M., 

At Leisure. 
Saugerties, N. Y. 
UNMARRIED. 

Entered class, 1889. 
Left class, 1891. 

Wheeler, Charles N., 

Real Estate Broker, 

119 West Jefferson Avenue, Peoria, 111. 

R. F. D. No. 36, Peoria, 111. 
^lARRIED, June 20, 1894, Aliss Rachel C. Wheeler. 
CHILDREN : 2^Iay 26, 1897, Jane Steele. 

Entered class, 1889. 

Left class, 1890. 

Wherry, Elmer George, A.B., A.M., (P. & S.) M.D., 

Physician, 

325 Clinton Avenue, Newark, N. J. 
MARRIED. September 17, 1902, Miss Mary Matilda Rue. 
CHILDREN: Feb. 18, 1904, Catherine Rue; Nov. 8, 1907, John B. 
POLITICAL OFFICE HELD : Coroner. 



Wherry, John Frederick, A.B., 

Lawyer, 

Prudential Building, Newark, N. J. 
325 Clinton Avenue, Newark, N. J. 
UNMARRIED. 

37 



White, Israel Losey, 

Newark News, Newark, N. J. 

Left our class in Freshman year, and reentered Princeton with '95, 
with which class he is listed. 

Wilkinson, John Wesley Featherer, A.B., A.M., 

Professor of Mathematics, 

State Normal School, Clarion, Pa. 
MARRIED, August 23, 1893, Miss Martie E. Stewart. 
CHILDREN : August 7, 1895, Florence ; August 22, 1900, Charles Herbert. 

Winans, Herbert L., A.B., A.M., 

Teacher, 

Harvard School, Los Angeles, Cal. 

1409 Hobart Boulevard, Los Angeles, Cal. 
MARRIED, August 21, 1903, Miss Dorothy Catherine Swezey. 
CHILDREN : April 25, 1906, Gilbert Swezey. 

Woodcock, Lee B., A.B., (M. C. of Phila.) M.D., 

Physician, 

627 Linden Street, Scranton, Pa. 
UNMARRIED. 

Wurts, Robert Kennedy, A.B., 

Banker, 

125 South Fourth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 

2202 Pine Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 
MARRIED, November 19, 1896, Miss Katherine Beach Newbold. 
CHILDREN: February 2, 1898, Marian Stewart; April i, 1899, Eleanor 

Trenchard ; December 4, 1900, Rosamond. 

Wylie, Andrew C, A.B., (N. Y. L.) LL.B., 

Lawyer, 

330 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 

4334 Pine Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 
MARRIED, June 24, 1896, Miss Alice Fairfield. 
CHILDREN: July 25, 1897, Walter Fairfield; Oct. 11, 1898, Loren Luke. 

Yont, Harry N., 

Greensburg, Pa. 

Left the class in Freshman year, and reentered Princeton as a member 
of '94, zvith zvhich class he is listed. 

Young, Henry, Jr., A.B., 

Lawyer, 

800 Broad Street, Newark, N. J. 

43 Washington Street, Newark, N. J. 
MARRIED, February i, 1899, Miss Alice Isabel Ballantine. 
CHILDREN : June 2, 1900, Henry 3d; July 15, 1901, Alice Ballantine; May 

ID, 1905, John Ballantine; August i, 1908, Rodney Stuart. 
POLITICAL OFFICE HELD: Member State Assembly. 

38 



^ 



NECROLOGY 



Deposited upon the silent shore of memory 

Images and precious thoughts that shall not die and cannot be destroyed." 

Words7vortk. 




HORACE THURBER CONANT 
(Taken one year before death.) 



HORACE THURBER CONANT 

Horace Thurber Conant was born at Monroe, Mich., on Octo- 
ber 4, 1 87 1. He attended the pubHc schools of that city until 
September, 1886, when he entered the Michigan Military Acad- 
emy at Orchard Lake, Mich., where he remained two years, after- 
ward returning to Monroe and completing his preparation for 
college at the Monroe High School. He entered Princeton Uni- 
versity in the fall of 1889, where he remained but one year. He 
died at his home at Monroe, Mich., October 13, 1890. 

41 




CONSTANT LINCOLN DEWITT 
(Taken three years before death) 



CONSTANT LINCOLN DEWITT 

Constant Lincoln Dewitt was born August i8, 1870. He 
attended the district public school at Wantage, N. J., until he 
started his preparation for college at the Seeley Institute, Sus- 
sex, N. J. From this institute he entered Princeton. 

After graduation from Princeton he accepted a position as in- 
structor in the Freehold Institute, N. J., which occupied his time 
for one year. During the summer of 1894 he studied at Heidel- 
berg, Germany. 

Returning to America, he entered the New York Law School, 
from which he took his degree of LL.D. in 1897. That same 
year he was admitted to the New Jersey bar, and began practice 
at 800 Broad Street, Newark, N. J. 

During his residence in Newark he was an enthusiastic mem- 
ber and one of the organizers of the Newark Athletic Club. 

On account of failing health in 1902 he was compelled to leave 
his law practice in Newark and go to Denver, Col. Later, dur- 
ing the winter of 1902-3, he went to Albuquerque, N. M., return- 
ing to Denver on March 25, 1903, where he died from tuber- 
culosis. 

He left a widow, Clementine Bruen Dewitt, but no children. 

43 




FRANK EUGENE DILL 
(Taken shortly before death) 



FRANK EUGENE DILL 

Dill was born in Richmond, Ind., April 24, 1871. His par- 
ents, Matthew Henry Dill, and his mother, Emily Hutton, were 
Americans. 

After attending the public school in his native town Dill en- 
tered Swathmore in September, 1885, electing a classical course, 
but remained only two years, returning to his home to enter our 
class in September, 1890, and left on account of poor health in 
November, 1891. He lived at home until the time of his death, 
October i, 1892. 

45 • 




WILLIAM ASHENHURST DUNN 
(Taken shortly before death) 



WILLIAM ASHENHURST DUNN 

William Ashenhurst Dunn was born September lo, 1873, in 
Carroll County, Ohio. His ancestry on both sides was Scotch- 
Irish. His father, Rev. W. C. Dunn, was a g^raduate of West- 
minster College, New Wilmington, Pa. W. A. Dunn took his 
preparatory course as well as Freshman and Sophomore years 
at the University of Wooster, Wooster, Ohio, entering with us 
with the Junior year. For three years after graduation he was in- 
structor in English at Princeton. During the year 1896- 1897, he 
taught English in the Hill School, Pottstown, Pa. The two fol- 
lowing years he spent at the Universit}^ of Strassburg, where he 
obtained his Ph.D. From 1899 until his death, October 18, 190 1, 
he was Professor of English in Adelphi College, Brooklyn. 

He was married June 20, 1901, to Miss Louise Morrison of 
Mineral Point, O. 

While at Princeton, Dunn was one of the editors of the Nas- 
sau Literary Magazine, and contributed to it many verses and 
sketches. His thesis at Strassburg had for its subject " De 
Quincey's Relation to German Philosophy and Literature." This 
was treated necessarily in the minute and infinitely patient fashion 
of German learning. But while in this way it won from the 
Faculty a " cum honore," it had far higher merits. He did not 
content himself with the mere accumulation and classification of 
facts. His work contributes largely to our understanding of that 
interesting period of our literary history, and what is more^ it 
furnishes many new lights upon De Quincey's character, sympa- 
thies, methods and freaks of thought. Besides this he wrote — 
and this was his favorite employment — many poems. Three or 
four of these have been published in the Atlantic Monthly. The 
rest are known only to two or three of his friends. In this field, 
as in others, he was as yet only beginning. 

47 




JOHN MARSHALL EDGAR 
(Taken one year before death) 



JOHN MARSHALL EDGAR 

Edgar entered at the beginning of our Sophomore year as a 
special student in the School of Science, and died of tuberculosis, 
November i8, 1891, at his home in Chambersburg, Pa. 

He was prepared for Princeton in the Chambersburg schools, 
but owing to ill health did not enter with us in Freshman year as 
a regular student. 

His father, the Rev. Dr. Edgar, was a college graduate, and 
at the time of our classmate's death was President of Wilson Fe- 
male College. His mother was a Miss Boggs, of Pennsylvania. 

During the year and a half that Edgar was at Princeton the 
ravages of the disease from which he died were so intense as to 
cause him great suffering. He never complained, however, but 
was not able to enter into athletic sports, and kept much to his 
room. 

His love for Alma IMater and the class was very great, and 
with his death we lost a loyal Princetonian. 

49 



"««t(!r 




PHILEMON AUMACK FALKENBURG 
(Taken several years before death) 



PHILEMON AUMACK FALKENBURG 

He was the son of Frances Aumack and Caleb Falkenburg, 
natives of New Jersey, and was born at Toms River, December 
4, 1870. 

He attended the Toms River High School, and from there 
went to Lawrenceville, where he studied for Princeton from 
1885 to 1889. He entered with the class in 1889, but left in 
June, 1890, on account of ill health. He remained at home for 
two years, and then went to San Francisco, Cal., then to Port- 
land, Ore., and then to Rockford, Wash., where he was employed 
in a banking institution, and subsequently in the same business 
at Seattle, Wash. After a brief visit to New Jersey he returned 
to Portland, Ore., and formed a partnership with an uncle, the 
firm representing the States of Oregon and Washington as gen- 
eral agents for the Manhattan Life Insurance Company. Con- 
tinuing in this business about two years, he was obliged to re- 
linquish active duties on account of failing health, resulting from 
a severe cold. Early in February, 1897, by advice of his physi- 
cians, he went to Honolulu in quest of health, but, failing to im- 
prove, he soon returned to the United States and at once settled 
in Phoenix, Arizona, where he died on March 26, 1897. His re- 
mains were brought to his native State and interred in the family 
plot in Riverside Cemetery, Toms River, N. J., April 2, 1897, 
exactly five years after the date of his leaving home to take up 
his residence in the West. 

51 




JOHN CLEVE GREEN 

(Taken four years before death) 



JOHN CLEVE GREEN 

John C. Green was born in Trenton, August i, 1872. His 
father, Charles Ewing Green, was a graduate of Princeton Class 
of i860, and a Trustee of the College. His mother was Miss 
Mary Livingston Potter. John was named for his grand uncle, 
John C. Green, through whose generosity the School of Science 
was established. He received his preparatory education at 
Lawrenceville, and entered the academic department of the col- 
lege in the fall of '89. 

While in college his health began to fail owing to intestinal 
troubles, and after graduation he spent the greater part of his 
time until his death in traveling for his health. For a short 
time, needing out-door life, he acted as curator for Lawrence- 
ville School. During his college course and after he was a very 
earnest worker in the Y. M. C. A. In the fall of '97 the disease 
from which he suffered told so upon his strength that he could 
take but little active part in business, and December 6, 1897, he 

died. 

53 




FREDERICK H. GUNNING 
(Taken eleven years before death) 



FREDERICK H. GUNNING 

Gunning was born at Trenton, N. J., May 25, 1871. Both of 
his parents were Americans, his father, who was a graduate of 
New York University, was a physician practicing in New York 
City. 

Gunning attended the Columbia Grammar School for a time, 
and then went to the Berkley School, from which he was grad- 
uated in 1889. He entered Princeton with us as a candidate for 
the B.S. degree. He remained at Princeton for one year only, 
however, preferring to engage in business. After leaving Prince- 
ton he went to New York City and opened an office as a real 
estate broker at 135 Broadway. 

Gunning was considered an authority on real estate values, 
and was a member of the Board of Tax Assessors of Westchester 
County, and was also a member of the New York Board of 
Brokers and of the New York Allied Real Estate Interests. 

On January 11, 1899, he married Miss Louise Clement Pop- 
ham. Two daughters were born to them, Frances Morris, who 
died at the age of three years, and Louise Popham. On January 
18, 1906, Gunning died of pneumonia. He is survived by his wife 

and daughter. 

55 




CHARLES CORLE HALL 
(Taken shortly before death) 



CHARLES CORLE HALL 

Hall was born in Neshanic, N. J., and was of American par- 
entage. Previous to entering Princeton he took a course in a 
business college, and worked in a store in Trenton, N. J. Not 
finding this work congenial, he decided to enter the ministry, and 
saved money for this end and studied under private instructors. 
In the fall of 1888 he entered Blairstown Academy, where he re- 
mained one year, taking a two years' course in one. In 1889 he 
entered Princeton with our class, remaining during Freshman 
year, but was forced to leave during the June examinations owing 
to an attack of typhoid. It was not until the following January 
that he was able to take up work again, at which time he joined 
the staff of the Trenton Times, continuing in this field until Octo- 
ber, 1893, when he resigned to take the position of assistant sec- 
retary of the Trenton Y. M. C. A. In June of that year he was 
married to Miss Lizzie V. Stryker. In the following October he 
was stricken with the malady from which he died January 2, 1894. 

At the time of his death he was assistant secretary of the Y. 

M. C. A., assistant superintendent of the Fifth Presbyterian 

Church Sunday-school, and vice-president of the Endeavor Local 

Union. 

57 




ANSON FORNEY HARROLD 
(Taken shortly before death) 



ANSON FORNEY HARROLD 

Anson Forney Harrold, son of Daniel and Louisa Harrold, 
was born at Manor, Westmoreland County, Pa, March lo, 1870. 
He entered Franklin and Marshall College from Greensburg 
Academy in 1888, and was graduated with honor with the Class 
of 1 89 1. While there he was a member of Franklin and Mar- 
shall's 'Varsity Football Team, and because of his splendid phys- 
ical development was an important factor in the team's success. 
While here he became a member of the Diagnothian Literary So- 
ciety and of the Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity. In the fall of '91 he 
entered the Electrical School at Princeton University, graduat- 
ing with the Class of '93, and while with us was active in ath- 
letics, being a member of '91 and '92 'Varsity Teams. Imme- 
diately after leaving Princeton he connected himself with the 
Westinghouse Electrical and Manufacturing Company of Pitts- 
burg, where during his five years' experience he acquired a repu- 
tation as a designing engineer and expert on the electrical quali- 
ties of metals. With this information he became one of the or- 
ganizers of the Pittsburg Transformer Company of Pittsburg, 
where he remained for three years, when he organized and be- 
came President of the American Transformer Company of New- 
ark, N. J., and with his skillful management developed a product 
which has become well known in every part of the country. 

Harrold was married on September 12, 1893, to Miss Maude 
Hubley of Lancaster, Pa., who survives him with their daughter, 
Elisabeth. 

For a year previous to his death he devoted all of his time to 
regaining his health, spending his last summer and fall in the 
Maine woods, and the winter at Camden, S. C. He, however, 
gradually failed, and on April 18, 1907, passed away. 

Harrold was a member of the Munn Avenue Presbyterian 
Church of East Orange, N. J., of which city he was a resident, 
and of the Princeton Alumni Association of the Oranges. 

59 




JOSEPH ALBRIGHT HENRY 
(Taken eleven years before death) 



JOSEPH ALBRIGHT HENRY 

Joseph Albright Henry was born at Oxford, N. J., December 
7, 1872, and died at Kearny, N. J., May 2, 1904. He was de- 
scended from Robert and Mary Ann Henry, who came from the 
north of Ireland in 1722, and settled in Chester County, Pa. Jo- 
seph's great-great-grandfather, William Henry, of Lancaster, 
Pa., born 1728, died 1786, was a prominent citizen of Pennsyl- 
vania, having been armorer of the ill-fated Braddock expedition. 
He was a member of the Pennsylvania Legislature, Treasurer of 
Lancaster County, Commissary of the State of Pennsylvania 
during the Revolutionary War, and Member of Congress in 
1784. He was the patron of Benjamin West, and the portraits 
of William Henry and his wife, by that artist, are now in Phila- 
delphia in the possession of the Pennsylvania Historical Society. 

Joseph's great-grandfather, William Henry, of Nazareth, Pa., 
born 1757, died 1821, was a manufacturer of guns, and was a 
Presidential Elector in 1792. 

Joseph's grandfather, William Henry, of Wyoming, Pa., born 
1794, died 1878, was one of the founders of Scranton, Pa., and 
was prominent in the development of that part of the State. 

Joseph's father, Eugene Thomas Henry, born 1826, died 1883, 
was connected with the iron and steel industry of Scranton, Pa., 
and in 1865, with his brother-in-law, Selden T. Scranton, formed 
the Oxford Iron Company at Oxford, N. J., which company was 
engaged in the mining and smelting of iron ore, and the manu- 
facture of cut nails. 

Joseph's mother was Emma E. Walter of Nazareth, Pa., 

daughter of Philip Walter, a physician. Joseph went through 

the public school at Oxford, and by hard work prepared himself 

for college. After he was graduated from Princeton in 1893, 

he spent a year teaching at the Hillman Academy of Wilkes- 

Barre, Pa. He then went abroad and spent two years studying 

at the University of Leipsic, devoting his attention to modern 

6r 



languages. Upon his return he was engaged in tutoring and 
teaching in various preparatory schools, chiefly at Savannah, Ga. 
He was never in robust health, particularly after he was gradu- 
ated from college. His death came suddenly May 2, 1904, and 
was followed May 15th, by the death of his brother, George S. 
Henry, at Buenos Ayres, Argentina, and on May 226. by the death 
of his brother, William Henry, at Punta Arenas, Chile. All three 
brothers are buried in the family plot at Belvidere, N. J. 

Joseph is survived by his mother, his sister, Eugenia M. 
Henry, both residing at Attleboro, Mass., and by his brother, 
Philip Walter Henry, residing in New York. 

He was unmarried. 

62 



CORTLANDT VAN R. HODGE 

Cortlandt Van Rensselaer Hodge was the son of the Rev. Dr. 
Edward B. and Alice C. Van Rensselaer Hodge. He was born 
at Burlington, N. J., July i, 1872. 

Through his father he was related to a family distinguished 
in science and theology. His grandfather, Hugh Lenox Hodge, 
was a celebrated physician of Philadelphia, and a professor in the 
University of Pennsylvania. 

On his mother's side he was descended from the Van Rens- 
selaers, famous in the history of New York, his great-grand- 
father, Gen. Stephen Van Rensselaer, being one of the Dutch 
patroons ruling the feudal estate " Van Rensselaerwyck," which 
once comprised the region now forming the counties of Albany, 
Columbia and Rensselaer in New York State. 

His mother died while he was quite young. 

During his childhood and school days his father was pastor 
of the Presbyterian Church of Burlington, N. J. He attended 
school at Van Rensselaer Seminary, Burlington, where his rank 
was among the highest. 

He entered Princeton with us, passing his examinations with- 
out conditions, and was first honor man in Freshman year, and 
a first group man throughout his course. His philosophy and his 
Christianity, while serious, were healthy, bright and happy. 

After graduation he entered the Medical School of the Uni- 
versity of Pennsylvania, and worked hard and faithfully to pre- 
pare himself for the service to which he intended to devote him- 
self. During this time he lived with his father in Philadelphia. 

At the University of Pennsylvania he joined the Psi Upsilon 
Fraternity, and was one of the leaders of his class. He was 
graduated in 1897 next to the head. Afterward he was elected a 
resident physician at the Presbyterian Hospital, one of the lead- 
ing hospitals of Philadelphia. There he established a reputation 
for sympathy, character and professional ability to which patients, 

63 




CORTLANDT VAN R. HODGE 
(Taken shortly before death) 



nurses, hospital authorities and visiting physicians gave glowing 
testimony. 

On February 14, 1899, he married Miss Elsie Campbell Sin- 
clair, a graduate of Bryn Mawr. A month after their marriage 
they left for China as missionary representatives of the Calvary 
Presbyterian Church, of Philadelphia. 

They went to the mission station at Pao-ting-fu, where they 
began the study of the language, and, as his time from this study 
permitted, he began the practice of medicine and relief of the 
Chinese. 

In the latter part of 1899 he, with some others, made a trip of 
about three hundred and fifty miles and return to prospect the 
country for a new mission station. 

At Pao-ting-fu he Vv^as associated in medical work with Dr. 
George Yardley Taylor of the Class of 1882 of Princeton, who 
had preceded him as a medical missionary, and established a hos- 
pital. He continued his work there so successfully that his trans- 
fer to Pekin was being arranged in the spring of 1900. 

At that time, however, internal dissensions arose in Chinese 
official circles, and anti-foreign feeling among the people broke 
out into attacks upon foreigners, causing what has since been 
known as the Boxer Insurrection. 

On Saturday, June 30, 1900, a company of Boxers and a large 
crowd of ruffians attacked one of the gates of the mission com- 
pound, set it on fire, and then followed this up by firing the hos- 
pital and one of the dwellings. They then burned another gate 
and another dwelling. Dr. and Mrs. Hodge and Dr. Taylor fled 
to the house of Mr. and Mrs. Simcox, where they united in mak- 
ing a defense. 

The crowd was kept off for a time by firearms, and some of 
them were killed, but at last the rabble prevailed. The faithful 
Chinese defenders in the compound were killed, the house in 
which the Americans had taken refuge was set on fire, and Dr. 
and Mrs. Hodge and all the others perished in the flames and 
destruction. At least they escaped falling into the hands of the 
Boxers. 

65 




PEARSALL HUMPHREY 

(Taken about eleven years before death) 



PEARSALL HUMPHREY 

Humphrey was born in New York City, October i, 1872. 
Both his father, WilHam M. Humphrey, and his mother were of 
American descent. He prepared for Princeton at the Lima 
School, at Lima, N. Y., and entered our class at the beginning of 
Freshman year. At the end of six months he left to return to 
New York City and enter business with his father. Between the 
time of his leaving Princeton and that of his death he resided in 
New York and led a life of leisure after a short business career. 

In the fall of 1898 he was attacked by pneumonia, from which 

he died November 8th. 

He was unmarried. 

67 




HARRIS LINDSLEY 
(Taken a few months before death) 



HARRIS LINDSLEY 

Harris Lindsley was born December ii, 1870, at Nashville, 
Tenn., son of Dr. Van Sinderen Lindsley and Lucy Harris Linds- 
ley. Harris was descended from John Lindsley, one of the ear- 
liest settlers of the New Haven Colony of Connecticut, who, with 
his sons John and Francis, came from London, England, about 
1640, and settled at Brandford, Conn. His great-uncle, Philip 
Lindsley, D.D., a distinguished educator and theologian, was 
vice-president of Princeton College from 1817 to 1822, when 
after Dr. Green's resignation he was one year acting president 
of Princeton College. Previous to 1817 he had been Professor 
of Languages at Princeton. 

On his mother's side he was descended in a direct line in his 
Lindsley ancestry from John Alden and Priscilla. His great- 
uncle. Dr. Harvey Lindsley, of Washington, D. C, an eminent 
physician who lived to an advanced age, was long honored as 
the oldest living graduate of Princeton. 

Harris received his preliminary education at Nashville, Tenn. 
He was prepared for college at the Princeton Preparatory School, 
and entered Princeton College in 1889, where he remained one 
year. He then attended Columbia Law School in New York City 
one year, and afterwards Columbian Law School, Washington, 
D. C, where he was graduated in 1894, with the degree of LL.M. 
After the completion of his education and his admission to the 
Bar of the District of Columbia in 1894, he entered the law of- 
fices of Webb & Webb, Washington, D. C, and soon became the 
junior partner, the firm being Webb, Webb & Lindsley. 

At the outbreak of the Spanish War in 1898, he was appointed 

69 



a Second Lieutenant by President McKinley in the Sixth United 
States Volunteer Infantry. He served with the regiment at 
Chickamauga Park and Porto Rico. During his service he was 
Judge Advocate of the General Court Martial, Post Treasurer, 
Commissary of Subsistence and Ordnance Officer. When the 
regiment was mustered out at Savannah, Ga., in March, 1899, 
he came to New York City with the grade of First Lieutenant 
to resume the practice of law in the office of Davies, Stone & 
Auerbach. Soon after coming to New York he became a mem- 
ber of Squadron A (cavalry) N. G. N. Y., later he was appointed 
a Second Lieutenant in the Twelfth Regiment N. G. N. Y. In 
1903 he was promoted to a First Lieutenancy in the Twelfth Regi- 
ment, and just three weeks before his death he was promoted to 
a Captaincy in the Twelfth Regiment N. G. N. Y., to command 
Company A. 

In 1900 he was the regular Democratic nominee for State 
Senator in the Fifteenth Assembly District. The district was a 
Republican stronghold, and he was defeated by his Republican 
opponent. Under the first administration of Mayor McClellan 
he was appointed Third Deputy Police Commissioner. He held 
this position up to the time of his death on August 14, 1905. He 
was a member of the Metropolitan Club and the Chevy Chase 
Club, of Washington, D. C, and the Princeton Club and the 
Strollers' Club of New York, Democratic Club of New York City, 
and Anawanda Club. He was a member of the Presbyterian 
Church. 

On July 13, 1905, a little more than a month before his death, 
his engagement to Miss Evelyn Pierrepont Willing', of Chicago, 
was announced. 

On August 14, 1905, while near Bennington, Vt., traveling in 
an automobile with his fiancee, the automobile was struck by a 
train, both being instantly killed. 

On August 16, 1905, the remains of Harris Lindsley were 



70 



brought to New York, where he was accorded a pubHc funeral, 
in which the Twelfth Regiment and the Police Department took 
part. 

He and Miss Willing were buried side by side in Dellwood 
Cemetery at Manchester, Vt., on August 21, 1905. 

71 




LOREN MILL LUKE 
(Taken five years before death) 



LOREN MILL LUKE 

Luke was born January 3, 1872, in Nanticoke, Pa., and was 
the only child of Sarah E. and Milmont Luke. He attended the 
public schools at Nanticoke until his thirteenth year, at which 
time he entered the Harry Hillman Academy, Wilkes-Barre, Pa., 
and was graduated June, 1889. In the fall of this year he entered 
with us a candidate for the degree of A.B. After graduation he 
moved from Nanticoke to Kingston, Pa. In the summer of 1893 
he traveled in Europe, and in the fall he began to read law with 
Attorney Thomas Atherton, in Wilkes-Barre, and in 1895 was ad- 
mitted at the bar of Luzerne County. He married Miss Emilie 
Loveland, of Kingston, Pa., November 28, 1896, and had one son, 
Loveland Luke, born October 21, 1897; died July 31, 1898. He 
and his wife spent the remainder of this summer in England, and 
lost their lives in the shipwreck of the " Mohegan " off the coast 
of England, October 14, 1898. 

73 




JOHN RANDOLPH McALPIN 
(Taken two months before death) 



JOHN RANDOLPH McALPIN 

Randolph was one of the McAlpin family whose name has 
been so closely identified with Princeton's during the last twenty 
years. He was born June 23, 1870, his father being of Scotch de- 
scent, his mother a direct descendant of the old Stanton family of 
New England. 

His preparatory education was received at the Lyon and Gil- 
bert School of New York City ; St. Paul's, Concord, N. H. ; and 
Lawrenceville, N. J., in the order mentioned. He entered Prince- 
ton with '93 in the fall of '89, and took a special course in the 
Scientific School, being a member of the class until the time of 
his death, which occurred May 28, 1893, from typhoid fever. We 
all remember what a shock his death was to us just before gradu- 
ation, and how we wore mourning for him during graduation 
week. During the four years that he was in college he took an 
active interest in lacrosse, and was one of the soloists of the Glee 

Club. 

75 




CARLETON SAYRE MATHER 
(Taken one year before death) 



CARLETON SAYRE MATHER 

Mather was born February 6, 1871. He entered Princeton 
with '93, and remained for the four years in the Civil Engineering 
School, but did not take his degree. 

His preparatory education was received at the Wilson and 
Kellogg School in his native city, New York. In the fall of '93 
'' Min " commenced his business career with the firm of George 
Mather's Sons, manufacturers of printer's ink. Desiring to know 
something of the practical working of the business, he devoted 
his time to the factory, which was situated in Long Island City. 
That he might be nearer to his work he moved to Flushing, L. I., 
and made the trip in and out each day. This arduous life, coupled 
with business worries, undermined his health, and he fell ill from 
typhoid. After a nine days' illness he died in June, 1894. 

At the time of his death he was engaged to be married. 

77 




CHRISTOPHER HOFFER MURRAY 
(Taken nine years before death) 



CHRISTOPHER HOFFER MURRAY 

Murray was born September 5, 1869, in Centre Hall, Pa., and 
was of Irish descent through both father and mother. He re- 
ceived his early education in the public schools of his native town, 
and in 1888 qualified as a teacher in the school in which he had 
been taught. Two years later he entered Franklin and Marshall 
University, where he remained two years. He then came to 
Princeton, joining the Class of 1893 at the beginning of the 
Junior year, and finishing with us. After graduation he joined 
the reportorial staff of the New York Sun, studying for the bar 
at the same time. After a year and a half he returned to Penn- 
sylvania and completed his law studies in the office of Gen. James 
Beaver at Bellefonte. After passing his examinations he started 
practicing his profession in Philadelphia, and shortly married 
Miss Bard of Reading, Pa. In 1899 his health became under- 
mined, and he went to Colorado, where he remained for two years. 
Not being benefited by the change, he returned to Centre Hall for 
seven months, at the end of which time he succumbed to tuber- 
culosis of the lungs, dying February 21, 1902. He was buried 
at Reading, Pa. 

79 




WALTER THOMAS NOBLE 
(Taken shortly before death) 



WALTER THOMAS NOBLE 

Walter T. Noble was born in Topeka, Kan., November 15, 
1872. He attended the public schools until thirteen years of age, 
then the preparatory department of Washburn College for two 
years, after which he entered Graylock Institute in South Wil- 
liamstown, Mass., to prepare for Williams College. He gradu- 
ated from that institute in the Class of 1889, and deciding he 
preferred Princeton to Williams, in the fall of 1889, at the age 
of seventeen, he entered with us, graduating with the class in 
1893. He was a member of the Princeton Glee Club for three 
years. 

After graduation Walter was employed in the office of the 
Trust Company of America in Topeka for two years, then en- 
gaged in the insurance business, first as local agent and later as 
special agent for Kansas and Missouri. In 1902, in pursuance of 
a long-considered plan, he located in Atchison, Kan., to become 
superintendent of an oatmeal and cereal mill. He superintended 
the building of the mill, placing the machinery, etc., but sud- 
denly sickened and died, just three days before the mill was ready 
for operation, from hemorrhagic purpura. 

Noble was married to Miss Jessie Small of Topeka, Kan., in 
October, 1896. They had three children: Walter T. Noble, Jr., 
born in Topeka, January 8, 1899; John Small Noble, born in 
Atchison, Kan., July 7, 1903, and George Milton Noble 3d, born 
in Atchison, Kan., August 10, 1904, eight days after his father's 
death. 

His father, George M. Noble, of Topeka, was of English de- 
scent, and was not a college graduate, though a student at De- 
pauw University for a time. 

His mother was Miss Eva Reed, of Fredericktown, Ohio. 
She was of Scotch descent, and a graduate of the Woman's Col- 
lege of Illinois. Walter's wife is of German descent. She was 
educated in the public schools of Topeka and in the Walnut Lane 
School of Chestnut Hill, near Philadelphia, and is now living with 
her three children in Minneapolis, Minn. 

8t 







CHARLES WILLIAMS OTTLEY 
(Taken a short time before death) 



CHARLES WILLIAMS OTTLEY 

Charles Williams Ottley died at Johns Hopkins Hospital May 
8, 1907. 

Dr. Ottley was a man of distinguished intellect and culture, 
devoting his life to equipment for his profession, and he had 
every advantage for scientific research and experience afforded 
in this country and abroad. He was thirty-six years of age, hav- 
ing been born in Columbus, Miss., February 21, 1871. He was 
the second son of Colonel John King Ottley, and is survived by 
his mother, Mrs. E. G. McCabe, and two brothers, John K. Ottley 
and Ernest G. Ottley. He was graduated with us, and later as 
M.D. from Johns Hopkins. After graduating from Princeton he 
taught for two years in the Boys' High School in Atlanta, Ga. 
After leaving Johns Hopkins he traveled one year in the interest 
of the student volunteer work, going from college to college en- 
listing young men as medical missionaries. 

He then served two years in the New York City Hospital, 
Blackwell's Island. From thence he went to Constantinople as 
resident physician and Professor of Biology in Robert College, 
an institution maintained by the Presbyterian Church. Here he 
came in contact with young men of thirteen nationalities. 

Later he went farther into Asia Minor to take charge of a 
hospital at Marsavan. Here his life was very hard, and feeling 
the need of a change he devoted a year to special research work 
in his profession in Vienna, Leipzig and London. In the autumn 
of 1906 he returned to America to regain his health, and with 
the determination of establishing his residence in Atlanta. His 
condition did not improve ; several months spent in New Mexico 



83 



failed to restore him, and a few weeks later he went to Johns 
Hopkins for treatment, where he died. 

During his college days Ottley was a noted track athlete, hav- 
ing won many medals and broke the United States intercollegiate 
record for walking. He was an honorary member of the New 
York Athletic Club. 

He was a devoted member of the Presbyterian Church, and 

from a lad had lived only for service to others. He was not 

married. 

84 



JOHN BRENT PALMER 

Jack Brent Palmer was born on the 5th of July, 1873, in 
Louisville, Ky. 

His father, grandfather and great-grandfather, all of whom 
were physicans, were born in Vermont, and were of English de- 
scent. 

His father, after receiving a high school education, being un- 
able to go to College on account of the Civil War, entered the 
medical department of University of Louisville, receiving the de- 
gree of M.D. in 1863. 

His mother, Lucy Brent, was born in Paris, Ky. Her father 
and grandfather were Virginians, the family being of Scotch- 
English descent. 

After Brent was graduated from Princeton he returned home, 
and in the fall of '93 entered the medical department of the 
University of Louisville, and received the degree of M.D. March 
30, 1896. 

He was appointed by the Faculty Clinical Assistant to the 
Chair of Genito-Urinary Diseases as soon as he was graduated, 
and held this position until his death. 

In November, 1896, he was appointed City Physician of the 
western district of Louisville. 

Brent had always a love for military life ; before going to 
Princeton he was a member of the First Kentucky Regiment, 
known as the Louisville Legion. 

When he came back from college he again joined, and by re- 
quest was assigned to the hospital corps as a private. 

After a year's course in medicine he was made hospital stew- 
ard, and when he received his degree he was promoted to the 
rank of Lieutenant and Assistant Surgeon. 

In the spring of 1898 war was declared against Spain, and 
on the President's call for volunteers, the First Kentucky Regi- 
ment was among the first to answer, and Brent was commis- 

85 




JOHN BRENT PALMER 

(Taken a few years before death) 



sioned by the United States as Major and Surgeon of the First 
Kentucky Volunteers, one of the youngest, if not the youngest, 
major-surgeons, being not quite twenty-five years of age. 

The regiment remained in camp at Chickamauga until the 
latter part of the summier, when it was ordered to Porto Rico. 

They arrived in Porto Rico just one day after the signing of 
the protocol, and so did not have any active service. 

For the medical department, however, there was an abun- 
dance of work, and in this Brent showed such marked executive 
ability as well as scientific knowledge that he was placed in 
charge of the division hospital by the commanding officer of the 
island. 

The regiment returned to Louisville the twelfth day of De- 
cember, 1898, and was mustered out of the United States service 
in February. 

Brent then resumed his private practice and his work as city 
physician. 

In November, 1900, he was appointed physician to the Erup- 
tive Hospital of Louisville. His stay in the tropics had, however, 
undermined his health. While there he suffered from dysentery 
and malaria, and, in fact, never did get rid of these diseases. 

In the summer of 1901 he visited his mother at her place on 
the coast of Long Island, and was greatly benefited by his stay 
of two months there. 

His return to a southern climate and the resumption of his 
professional duties soon brought back his trouble, and from day 
to day throughout the winter 1 901 -1902 he became weaker and 
weaker. 

In the spring of 1902 he took a short trip East, returning by 
way of St. Louis. He decided to stay in St. Louis for a while, 
and for a few^ weeks became much better. 

About the first of July he became decidedly worse, and passed 

away in St. Louis July 12, 1902. 

He was noti married. 

87 



4f 



■^ 



*!%• 





CHARLES HODGE STOCKTON 

(Taken several years before death) 



CHARLES HODGE STOCKTON 

Charles Hodge Stockton was born in Princeton, N. J., January 
i6, 1871. He was prepared for college at the Princeton Prepara- 
tory School and by private tutors. His family on both sides were 
old American stock. His father, Col. Samuel W. Stockton, en- 
tered Princeton, but left to join the United States army. 

Charlie entered with us Freshman year, but left in November, 
1891, to practice engineering. He worked at his profession with 
the Pennsylvania Railroad for some time, and then in building 
trolley lines in the South. He w^ent to Nicaragua on the Govern- 
ment Canal Survey, where he spent several months in perfect 
health. On his return he w^as employed by the Government in 
Washington, D. C, on work in connection with the Panama 
Canal. He was shortly sent back to Nicaragua, when he soon 
fell a victim to a fever from which he died December 12, 1899. 

89 




EDWARD YEOMANS THORP 

(Taken about two years before death) 



EDWARD YEOMANS THORP 

Thorp prepared for Princeton at the Hill School after a few 
years spent at the Sedgewick Institute. He entered with the 
class in '89, and remained during the entire four years. He was 
born Xovember 3, 1871, at East Orange, N. J., and was of Eng- 
lish descent. 

After graduation he was affiliated with the publishing busi- 
ness, establishing the firm of Thorp & Holbrook at 156 Fifth 
Avenue, New York City. 

In 1898 he joined the Seventy-first Regiment of New York 
two or three days before they left the city for the Spanish War. 
On the return of his company to this country he obtained " sick 
leave," and was taken to the Presbyterian Hospital suffering 
from a fever contracted while at the front. He never rallied, 
however, and died September 3, 1898, as much a martyr for his 
country as if he had fallen on the battlefield. 

He was unmarried. 

91 




WILLIAM FERGUSON TYSON 
(Taken shortly before death) 



WILLIAM FERGUSON TYSON 

Tyson, who was with us only Freshman year, was born 
March 2, 1871, in Columbia, Pa., where his father was engaged 
in the manufacture of boilers. 

He attended the local schools, and entered Princeton with the 
intention of studying for the ministry. Ill health, however, pre- 
vented his following this plan, and in June, 1890, he gave up his 
studies and returned to Columbia to engage in business. March 
31, 1892, he died from his ailment. 

93 




GEORGE EMMONS WHITE 
(Taken shortly before death) 



GEORGE EMMONS WHITE 

White was born June 12, 1871, at the United States Navy 
Yard, Philadelphia, Pa. His early years were spent in Prince- 
ton, N. J., and at the United States Naval Academy, Annapolis, 
Md. One year he spent in China and Japan, and later made a 
cruise to Europe on board the United States Ship Portsmouth, 
commanded by his father, then Captain White. His father was 
the late Rear Admiral Edwin White, U. S. N., a native of Ohio. 
His mother w^as the daughter of Rear Admiral George F. Em- 
mons, U. S. N. On both sides of his family he was descended 
from men Avhose names stand prominent among the soldiers and 
statesmen in Colonial history. At the age of eighteen he entered 
Princeton, taking the full academic course, and was graduated 
with us. In September of that year he entered the New York 
Law School, was graduated two years later, and admitted to the 
New York Bar, and began his professional career in the ofhce of 
William Allan Butler. After practicing law for five years he 
gave it up for journalism. His work in this field met with suc- 
cess and rapid promotion. 

For seven years he was connected with the business depart- 
ment of the Nevv^ York World, being recognized as one of the 
foremost advertising men of the city. He married, in 1900, Mrs. 
Charles G. Toland, widow of Dr. Toland, of San Francisco. 
She died in 1903, leaving no children. The valvular lung trouble, 
from which he died on October 17, 1907, was congenital, his 
general health, however, was so good that only occasionally did 
his trouble assert itself. Two winters ago the compensation of his 
heart was seriously disturbed by a severe attack of bronchitis, 
and he went for rest and treatment in April to the Presbyterian 
Hospital in New York City. After being there two months he 
recovered sufficiently to leave town, and joined his family in the 
Blue Ridge Mountains. In August he was obliged to return to 
the hospital. 

This period of withdrawal from active life, and especially the 
last month of his illness, was marked by the utmost cheerfulness, 
patience and courage. He died October 7, 1907. 

He was a member of the Calumet and Princeton Clubs of New 
York, and the Nassau Club of Princeton. 

95 




WILLIAM BUTLER WOODBRIDGE 
(Taken a few months before death) 



WILLIAM BUTLER WOODBRIDGE 

William Butler Woodbridge was born in Chicago, January 5, 
1870. His father, John Woodbridge, a lawyer of marked ability, 
and a member of the old Massachusetts Puritan family of that 
name, was born in 1829, at Hadley, Mass., and was graduated 
from Amherst with the Class of '49. Within a very few years 
he married Miss Elizabeth Butler, of Stuyvesant, N. Y. 

William Butler Woodbridge, the youngest of their five chil- 
dren, inherited from his father the stern qualities of the English 
Puritan, and from his mother the humor of the Irish. A note- 
worthy combination of characteristics, all of which contributed 
to make Woodbridge the remarkable man he was for years be- 
fore his death. 

Practically all of us remember him as he was in the old days 
at " The Burg " — irresponsible, manly, serious, boyish, by turns, 
but always lovable. Comparatively few, probably, know what a 
great, broad, far-seeing, transacting man he grew to be. 

Shortly after leaving Princeton he formed a partnership with 
R. M. Mullen in the contracting business in Chicago. This firm 
was maintained for several years, during which period it con- 
structed a number of buildings, among them' a large factory in 
North Chicago. 

Their success, however, did not come up to the hopes of the 
partners, and the firm was dissolved. Then followed several 
years of civil engineering, railroad and tunnel construction, in 
Kentucky and South Dakota, as well as Chicago. 

None of these occupations seemed to call forth the best that 
was in him, but when, some five years after leaving college, he 
turned his attention to life insurance, he found a field of en- 
deavor in which was ample room for the full exercise of his un- 
usual mental powers and truly dynamic energy. A year of solicit- 
ing and " writing life insurance " for a small Western company, 
with his headquarters in Pittsburg, was filled also with study of 

97 



the science of insurance. A new and big idea began to take 
shape in his mind. 

In 1899 Woodbridge moved East with his family. He had 
married on June 24, 1894, Mrs. Hazel Pratt Garfield, of Chicago, 
who had then a baby son. The following year William Butler 
Woodbridge, Jr., was born. They settled for a time in Spring- 
field, Mass., where he established his headquarters as general 
agent for New England of the Bankers' Life Insurance Company 
of New York. And here he set about putting into effect his big 
idea. 

For decades life insurance companies had been doing busi- 
ness on a very wasteful basis of expenditures for commissions. 
A general agent, having exclusive charge of any given territory, 
was paid by his company not only a very large commission on 
the first year's premium, but also a commission of, say, ten per 
cent, of every succeeding premium (called a renewal commis- 
sion) paid on every policy written in his territory, as long as it 
should remain in force. 

It is obvious that the sum of these renewal commissions on 
the entire business of any company is a considerable percentage 
of its premium income. It is as certain to accrue as the premium 
income itself, being a part of it. And, inasmuch as life insur- 
ance is, first and last, purely a matter of scientific averages, the 
degree of that certainty is readily calculable. 

Now, briefly, what Woodbridge did was to see that the pres- 
ent value of a lot of these renewal commissions could therefore 
be ascertained and capitalized. This perception enabled him by 
September, 1902, to start the Columbian National Life Insurance 
Company, of Boston, with only $220,000 of capital and surplus, 
and of course no business ; and to give it such an impetus that 
four and a quarter years later, December 31, 1906, this com- 
pany had insurance policies outstanding of over $49,000,000. 
Some idea of the magnitude of this feat is conveyed by the state- 

98 



merit that no twelve companies combined ever did so much in the 
same j>eriods of their several existences. 

These results were made possible chiefly by the plan of put- 
ting all the business through a single, corporate agency which 
assigned all renewal commissions thereon to a securities' com- 
pany in return for the latter company's shares of stock on an 
agreed basis. These shares being sold not only produced iunds 
to finance the writing of insurance, but naturally every share- 
holder became a '' booster " of the insurance company. 

As long as Woodbridge's ideas were carried out his company 
went steadily ahead. His untimely death, due to the overturn- 
ing of an automobile in which he was riding on the night of 
June 14, 1905, ended his career that had started so brilliantly 
and was leading him steadily onward. 

99 







ENRIQUE YBANEZ 
(Taken two months before death) 



ENRIQUE YBANEZ 

Ybanez was born in Mexico, November 20, 1869, and was of 
Spanish descent. 

After preparing in several local schools he entered with us in 
1889 a candidate for the degree of C.E. On being graduated he 
returned to Mexico, and divided his time between his home in 
Mexico and his hacienda. 

He died of pneumonia January 15, 1896. He had engaged in 
no vocation, and was unmarried. 

lOI 



VITAL STATISTICS 

Living i88 

Deceased 27 

*Listed with other classes 5 



220 



Graduated with class 152 

Left class before graduation 47 

Specials 14 



* 



215 



Married 152 

Single 63 

Number married having children 119 

Number married having one child 46 

Number married having two children 32 

Number married having three children , . . . . 25 

Number married having four children 8 

Number married having five children 3 

Number married unaccounted 5 

Average age at graduation, twenty-two years. 



VOGATIONS 

Law 45 Teaching 14 

Medicine 19 Author 3 

Ministry 16 Architect 1 

Engineers 12 Leisure 6 

Military i Business 71 

*The five listed with other classes are not counted in the statistics, 

;q2 



GEOGRAPHICAL REPRESENTATION 

New York 45 Illinois 4 

Pennsylvania 41 Colorado 4 

New Jersey 23 Maryland 3 

Foreign 13 Washington, D. C 3 

Massachusetts 11 Kentucky 3 

Ohio 9 Michigan 3 

Missouri 5 Louisiana 2 

California 4 Georgia 2 

New Mexico 2 

Florida,. Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Mississippi, Nebraska, Nevada, North 
Carolina, Oregon, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Wisconsin, each one 
member. 

In order to keep the Class Records accurate and up to date, it is essen- 
tial that the Secretary be promptly notified by the members of all matters 
relating to themselves along the lines indicated upon the above list; it is 
hoped that this zvill be construed as a continuing and urgent request to 
each member of the class for such information. 

George C. Eraser^ Secretary, 
I Nassau Street, New York City. 

103 



JUL 37 1908 



